this post was submitted on 27 Aug 2023
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Well, alcoholism is an addiction, and addictions are mental illnesses. If you called someone an alcoholic because they're drinking too much, I'd consider it proper medical terminology and not a slur. If you called someone an alcoholic because you don't like them and you want to accuse them of mental illness, I'd consider it problematic, but not a slur. If we lived in a world where accusing someone of addiction in order to attack them was commonplace, then in that hypothetic world I'd call it a slur.
What's a wrecker?
No, I think calling someone a narcissist when you have a strong understanding of the medical meaning is okay, and I wouldn't consider it a slur in those cases. As you'll see in the other threads, I took issue with someone describing neurotypical behaviour as narcissistic.
No, that's not the core of NPD. The core of NPD is lack of healthy ego development. This results of struggles with self esteem and relating to others. Most commonly by creating a false ego which needs to be bigger than a regular one because it's brittle and breaks easily.
People perceive NPD as being a disorder of bad behaviour for two reasons. First: Ableist stereotypes spread by self help books and hateful people. Second: When a narcissist's false ego is destroyed they become completely unable to function as a person, overcome with suicidal grief, and so many narcissists will go to great lengths to protect their egos out of a desire to live, even in situations where that trauma response isn't correct or helpful.
Thank you. Am I also correct to assume that when you see anti-BPD hate speech, you feel a dread in the pit of your stomach that this speech is going to embolden someone to abuse a borderline?
I'm nonbinary. People think having emotions and opinions is belligerent behaviour when it comes from enbies. The patriarchy expects us to be demure, submissive sex objects. And I refuse to follow that gender role. I speak with the same boldness as an average male, because I think enbies and males deserve the same rights.