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Sodomy psychiatry

When someone doesn’t wanna admit he wants to have sex with your ass , usually it is a fuxking uneducated moron , but decides to make it rule anyway that allows him to change your appearance based on his jail psychology diagnosis which is usually in favour of other uneducated Fuck wit moron hurricanes that fuck everything you build then disappear like a fart outside yeh a big annoying fart
Bro anyone that fucks chicks , and doesn’t just use them to have your gay kids for you , is asking for sodomy psychiatry and that’s after you thought they got an std but they didn’t , now your excuse is different but the end result will be the same exactly what you need to happen and nothing your biggest threat needs to happen.

plastic psychiatry

When psychiatric care is directed toward individuals who feel and function in ways that were previously considered normal and healthy, but who themselves (and/or their relatives) perceive their condition as a mental illness requiring medical treatment. Plastic psychiatry arises when cultural norms and regulatory frameworks are structured in such a way that it becomes difficult for healthcare providers to deny medical interventions to these individuals, who then becomes patients of plastic psychiatry.

This type of care aims to maximize the patient's biological potential rather than elevate them to the societal norm for functional capacity and psychological well-being. In this respect, it differs from the traditional psychiatric view of mental illness.

In this way, it resembles cosmetic surgery procedures performed on individuals without any objective deformities that would normally warrant surgical intervention.

It should not be confused with "biohacking," a term better reserved for individuals who do not consider themselves mentally ill but nonetheless wish to feel or function even better and to reach their biological maximum potential—often with the help of medical interventions such as blood tests and dietary supplements. However, such individuals typically perceive themselves as striving for something beyond the norm and do not expect the healthcare system to allocate resources for them, as opposed to the patients of plastic psychiatry.
"The 5th referral of its kind this week: A 35 years old man, married, has three children and a successful career, but was recently diagnosed with ADHD and expects to be treated with stimulants to enhance his performance—yet another patient of plastic psychiatry!"

Sluggish Psychiatry

A term for the widespread online practice of casually imputing mental illnesses to others—especially religious, spiritual, or metaphysical believers—as a way to dismiss, humiliate, or pathologize them. Terms like “delusional,” “schizophrenic,” “narcissistic,” “needs therapy,” or “needs a psychiatrist” are thrown around as generic insults, often by people with no clinical training. Sluggish psychiatry treats mental health diagnoses as cheap ammunition, ignoring the real suffering of people with mental illnesses while using clinical language to silence and demean those with different worldviews.
Example: “When she mentioned she practiced meditation, he immediately said she was ‘delusional and needs a psychiatrist.’ Sluggish psychiatry: weaponizing mental health labels to dismiss spiritual practices.”

Sluggish Psychiatry

The widespread online practice of casually diagnosing others with mental disorders—especially dissidents, anti-capitalists, religious believers, and spiritual people—as a way to dismiss, pathologize, and silence them. Terms like "schizophrenic," "delusional," "narcissistic," "needs therapy," or "needs a psychiatrist" are thrown around by people with no clinical training, often in the same breath as "conspiracy theorist" or "pseudoscience." Sluggish psychiatry uses the authority of mental health to label any worldview outside the speaker's own as sick, effectively transforming psychiatric language into a weapon of ideological enforcement. It trivializes real mental illness while bullying those with different beliefs.
Example: "When he questioned corporate media narratives, dozens of replies called him 'delusional' and 'in need of a psychiatrist.' Sluggish psychiatry: pathologizing dissent instead of engaging with it."

drive-by psychiatry

Drive-by psychiatry is when a total stranger (usually not a mental health professional) tries to diagnose you based on your interactions. This is very common on social media and internet comment sections.
To make this online space more inclusive, we ask that members refrain from drive-by psychiatry, especially while arguing with someone you disagree with.

Critical Theory of Psychiatry

The application of Critical Theory to psychiatry—examining how psychiatric knowledge, diagnosis, and treatment are shaped by power, how they can serve social control, and how they might be reformed or transformed. Critical Theory of Psychiatry asks: How are psychiatric categories constructed, and whose interests do they serve? How has psychiatry been used to confine, drug, and control marginalized populations? What role does the pharmaceutical industry play in shaping diagnosis and treatment? Drawing on anti-psychiatry, mad studies, and Foucault, it insists that psychiatry is never just medicine—it's a site of power, a tool of normalization, and a potential source of harm as well as help.
"They diagnose you with a disorder because you don't fit their norms. Critical Theory of Psychiatry asks: whose norms? Who decides what's disordered? Psychiatry has a history of pathologizing homosexuality, political dissent, and cultural difference. Critical psychiatry insists on asking: is this diagnosis helping you, or controlling you? And who benefits from the categories we use?"

Sociology of Psychiatry

A sociological field that studies psychiatry as a medical and social institution, examining its diagnostic frameworks, treatment practices, professional boundaries, and role in social control. It investigates how psychiatric categories evolve, how they are applied differentially across race, class, and gender, how psychiatric authority is maintained, and how patients experience and resist psychiatric labeling. The sociology of psychiatry draws on labeling theory, medical sociology, and critical disability studies to understand mental health as both a biological and a social phenomenon.
Example: “The sociology of psychiatry revealed that the ‘epidemic’ of certain disorders often followed marketing campaigns by pharmaceutical companies, not changes in underlying pathology.”