Pathologizing and stigmatizing
Novelist Patricia Cornwell [left] has had bipolar disorder: “My wiring’s not perfect,” as she puts it, and she takes a mood stabiliser. Other talented people with mental health challenges include psychiatrist Kay Redfield Jamison, writer and actor Carrie Fisher, tv journalist Jane Pauley.
But people may also label attributes of giftedness negatively, as pathological.
Kathleen Noble, Ph.D., is a Professor and Assistant Director of the Early Entrance Program, University of Washington in Seattle, where she also has a private practice as a psychologist, working with gifted women.
In our interview, she said, “A number of my gifted clients are psychic or have psychic abilities. That’s only one place they might get pathologized. There are a number of qualities that gifted women possess that can easily get mislabeled and misdiagnosed… I have seen, particularly in adolescents, that gifted girls who are very high energy and high verbal are often punished by teachers for those qualities, and the qualities are then negatively represented, rather than positively acknowledged.”
The book Misdiagnosis And Dual Diagnoses of Gifted Children and Adults affirms that “Many of our brightest, most creative, most independent thinking children and adults are being incorrectly diagnosed as having behavioral, emotional, or mental disorders.
“They are then given medication and/or counseling to change their way of being so that they will be more acceptable within the school, the family, or the neighborhood, or so that they will be more content with themselves and their situation.
“The tragedy for these mistakenly diagnosed children and adults is that they receive needless stigmatizing labels that harm their sense of self and result in treatment that is both unnecessary and even harmful to them, their families, and society.”
It can be profoundly valuable and helpful to acknowledge your attributes realistically, and find out for sure the ways you are mentally healthy, or not.
> book: Kay Redfield Jamison. Touched With Fire : Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament
> related pages:
Depression and Creativity
dysfunction resources : articles books sites
bipolar disorder & creative talent
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