Skip to main content

Psychological Slurs

Terms that use mental health concepts as generic insults to imply instability, irrationality, or weakness. These slurs (e.g., "You're paranoid," "She's hysterical," "That's psychotic," "Don't be so borderline") take serious clinical conditions and deploy them to dismiss emotional reactions, legitimate concerns, or unconventional beliefs. They are the modern equivalent of calling someone "insane" to win an argument, and they massively contribute to the stigma around mental illness by making diagnoses synonymous with being wrong or unhinged.
Example: A community organizer expresses passionate, urgent concern about a local environmental hazard. A corporate representative, aiming to discredit them, tells the media the organizer is "histrionic" and "prone to panic attacks," subtly framing their advocacy as a symptom of mental instability rather than a reasoned response to threat. The slur pathologizes justified emotion and civic engagement, shifting the discussion from "is there a hazard?" to "is the complainant sound of mind?" Psychological Slurs.
by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
mugGet the Psychological Slurs mug.

Psychological Bigotry

The pervasive bias that equates mental health diagnoses with diminished credibility, rationality, or moral agency. It operates on the assumption that if someone has a psychiatric label (e.g., depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar disorder), their perceptions, memories, and opinions are inherently less reliable or valuable. This leads to "diagnostic overshadowing," where any physical symptom a patient with a mental health history reports is automatically attributed to their psychology, often with tragic medical consequences.
Example: A military veteran with a PTSD diagnosis goes to the ER with acute chest pain. The triage nurse, seeing the PTSD in the chart, assumes it's a panic attack and deprioritizes them. The pain is actually a heart attack, leading to a critical delay. The psychological bigotry here is the automatic inference that the mental health condition explains and devalues the physical complaint. It creates a two-tiered system of believability where the "mentally ill" are presumed to be unreliable narrators of their own bodily experience. Psychological Bigotry.
by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
mugGet the Psychological Bigotry mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email