It wasn’t until 1987 that
homosexuality ceased being categorized as a disease in the DSM (the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders). Used as the
premiere diagnostic bible by mental health professionals and insurance
companies worldwide, the DSM has been predominately responsible for the
labeling of an individual’s behavior as regards whether it falls within
the range of agreed-upon norms. As such, it’s been both praised and
reviled over the years. Praised because of its concise descriptions and
categorizations of behavioral symptoms, and reviled because of its
reinforcement of stigmatizing attitudes towards those whose behavioral
is deemed “abnormal.”
In fact, there’s an old joke
about how clinicians use diagnostic labels to interpret their patients’
behavior. If the patient arrives early for his therapy appointment,
he’s anxious. If he’s late, he’s resistant. And if he’s on time, he’s
compulsive.
Nowadays, however, it’s
becoming clear that the joke may be on us. Due to the influence of both
broadcast media and the Internet, diagnostic labels are thrown around
quite casually by people who ought to know better (shrinks on TV news
programs) as well as by people who usually don’t (hosts of TV talk
shows, Internet podcasts and innumerable blogs). Moreover, like many
cultural phenomena, the ascribing of diagnostic labels follows the
dictates of trends.
Remember how every other child was diagnosed with ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder)? Now the “hot” new label is bipolar disorder (what used to be called manic-depression). Lately, you’re not cool if you’re not bipolar.
Remember how every other child was diagnosed with ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder)? Now the “hot” new label is bipolar disorder (what used to be called manic-depression). Lately, you’re not cool if you’re not bipolar.
To be fair, there’s some
good that has resulted from this expanding conversation about diagnostic
labels. Case in point: I was recently on a panel with a successful
businesswoman who claimed that until she’d been diagnosed with bipolar
disorder, she didn’t have a frame of reference for her inexplicably
erratic and self-destructive behaviors. Further, she felt that having
the diagnosis, and receiving the appropriate treatment to address it,
was what saved her life.
I completely understand her
position. I myself have patients who are calmed and even reassured by a
diagnosis that aligns them with others suffering the same symptoms. They
feel less alone, less alienated from how “normal” people behave. In
other words, they have a “handle” on it.
However, my concern is not
with how these patients see themselves. It’s with how clinicians see
their patients. How so many mental health professionals use diagnostic
labels to both distance themselves from patients and reduce them to a
set of conventionally agreed-upon symptoms. (At a clinical conference
years ago, a colleague, describing his practice, said, “It’s a nice
balance. I have three bipolars, a number of major depressives, and only
one borderline. Thank God.”) Obviously he didn’t see these folks as
patients. Hell, he didn’t see them as people. He saw them solely in terms of their clinical diagnoses.
Now I suspect (and greatly
hope) that this particular therapist’s attitude isn’t shared by most of
his colleagues. Yet his comment goes directly to my point. Namely, that
while I don’t exactly revile the DSM, I view its contents (and the
thinking behind it) with a great deal of skepticism. Not that there’s
anything wrong, per se, with labels. Nor with the idea of a common
vocabulary so that all us clinical geniuses can communicate with each
other. It’s just that, if we’re speaking honestly, diagnostic labels
exist for the convenience of the labelers. Which is fine, as far as it
goes. But how far is too far?
In my opinion, “too far” is
when labeling ventures into the arena of individual freedom; i.e., when
it threatens the concept of equality. How does it do this? By giving
clinicians the language to reinforce the views of the dominant culture.
To me, equality means just
that: all people are equal under the law, and in relation to each other.
Regardless—-as the saying goes—-of race, creed, or color. To which I’d
add sexual orientation, political beliefs, gender identification, and
choice of living singly or with a partner. (This last point is crucial.
One of the dominant culture’s norms is that healthy people are in a
relationship, or, if not, yearn to be. And that preferring to live
alone, or under the same roof with others but without romantic
attachment, is a sign of psychological disturbance.)
Equality means the right to
be what the British lovingly refer to as “eccentric.”
Equality means that thinking and living differently than how most others do is not a manifestation of anti-social behavior. Nor is it a silent condemnation of those living a more conventional life. In simplest terms, I’m saying that true equality means that a hermit living in a cabin in the woods is not necessarily suffering from a mental disorder (i.e., schizoid personality, with paranoid features). I’m not claiming he or she is not burdened by psychological distress. I’m just saying that such a lifestyle choice doesn’t in and of itself indicate a disorder. No more than it would a long-distance trucker who prefers his or her own company for weeks at a time.
Equality means that thinking and living differently than how most others do is not a manifestation of anti-social behavior. Nor is it a silent condemnation of those living a more conventional life. In simplest terms, I’m saying that true equality means that a hermit living in a cabin in the woods is not necessarily suffering from a mental disorder (i.e., schizoid personality, with paranoid features). I’m not claiming he or she is not burdened by psychological distress. I’m just saying that such a lifestyle choice doesn’t in and of itself indicate a disorder. No more than it would a long-distance trucker who prefers his or her own company for weeks at a time.
If we’re to truly support
and encourage equality, then we have to be skeptical of our inclination
to label. And it’s not just mental health professionals who fall prey to
this. We all do, to some extent. If a family member isn’t as
ambitious as we think he or she should be, we label it laziness. If a
friend finds the holidays so disturbing and anxiety-producing he spends
each Christmas season in a tent out in the desert, we label him weird.
I’ve even heard couples who choose not to have children labeled as
selfish.
As a therapist in private
practice for over 25 years, I’ve grown to appreciate the vast
differences in temperament, relationship choices, communication styles
and even prejudices of my patients. Which means I’ve been forced many
times to challenge the orthodoxy of my own profession, and to pay
attention to the potential inequality underlying certain therapeutic
assumptions.
In the world outside my
consulting room, it seems that the more lip-service is given to the
notion of equality, the less actual practice of it there is. As a nation
and as a global community, we’re more divided than ever. Our politics
have become almost nothing but labeling, a divisiveness that
strikes at the heart of equality. Sectarian violence around the world is
a tangible result of one group of people denying the equality of
another group. Rather than a reaffirmation of Buber’s “I and Thou”—-a
relationship that can only exist in a context of equality—-people from
all walks of life are asserting that their rights, opinions and beliefs
have ascendance over those of others.
Put bluntly, to label is to
divide. To divide is to upend equality. And without a basic sense of
equality, there can never be the kind of social and cultural adhesion
that ensures what our Founding Fathers called “domestic tranquility.”
This is not to posit some Utopian love-fest among all peoples. That will
never occur. But I’m thinking more in line with something that the late
Martin Luther King said: “Peace is not the absence of conflict; it’s
the presence of justice.”
If we as a people are to
maintain the presence of justice in our society, then we have to view
our differences through the lens of equality rather than that of labels.
To label this individual as “bad” and some other individual as “good,”
based on their respective beliefs, sexual orientation or lifestyles, is
to render the former a non-person. And it is much easier to abuse,
threaten, even kill a non-person than someone you feel has an equal right to exist.
Of course, reaffirming that
all people are equal isn’t to say that all behaviors are equal. As a
society, we have a right to label certain harmful or exploitive
behaviors as unacceptable. Just as we have a right as a society to
determine how to bring to justice those who exhibit those behaviors.
But what I’m referring to is
something else. It’s the temptation each of us has to judge another,
merely against the standards of conventional society or measured against
our own idiosyncratic standards. To deny others’ equality as an existential right because
we dislike their religious faith (or lack thereof), are offended by
their choice of sexual partners, or reject their own stated gender
identity.
As human beings with
prejudices and insecurities (conscious or unconscious), we may be made
uncomfortable by one or another of these life choices. We may even find
them a sign that civilization is crumbling, or that every diverse or
otherwise unconventional choice is an assault on “traditional values.”
But that still does not rationalize inequality. Nothing does. Especially not knee-jerk appeals to religious freedom, patriotism and xenophobia.
Which brings me back to the
DSM, and how stunningly reductionist it can be when it comes to
providing diagnostic labels. The general public may be unaware of the
fact that, prior to the publication of each new addition to the manual,
mental health professionals can suggest new diagnostic categories to be
added to the list. One of my recent favorite suggestions is quite in
line with the constraints on freedom and equality that I’ve been
addressing.
Called “Political Apathy
Disorder,” this new diagnostic label was to be given to individuals
lacking an appropriate sense of social justice. Among the criteria to be
used when giving a patient this diagnosis are whether he or she lives
in a gated community, fails to take into account the impact on the
environment of a purchase, and refuses to vote in local elections.
Believe me, I’m generally not a fan of people who exhibit these traits,
but I’d never go so far as to label them evidence of a psychological
disorder. To me, this is just labeling—-or in this case, social
engineering—-to a disturbing degree.
In fact, a colleague of
mine, Dr. David Levy, once wrote a satiric essay in which he proposed a
new diagnostic category especially for mental health professionals. It
was called “Pervasive Labeling Disorder.” I can think of at least a few
fellow therapists who seem to suffer from it.
The sad fact is, I think
we’re all guilty at times of “Pervasive Labeling Disorder.” As I
mentioned above, it might even be woven into our very natures as humans.
Regardless, labeling is a potential enemy of equality. And we do so at
our peril.
As Benjamin Franklin once said, “Liberty is the one thing you cannot have without giving it to everyone else.”
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Formerly a Hollywood screenwriter (My Favorite Year; Welcome Back, Kotter, etc.), Dennis Palumbo is now a licensed psychotherapist and author of Writing From the Inside Out (John Wiley). His work has been profiled in The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, GQ and other publications, as well as on CNN, NPR and PBS.
His mystery fiction has appeared in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, The Strand and elsewhere, and is collected in From Crime to Crime (Tallfellow Press). His acclaimed series of crime novels (Mirror Image, Fever Dream, Night Terrors and the latest, Phantom Limb)
feature psychologist Daniel Rinaldi, a trauma expert who consults with
the Pittsburgh Police. All are from Poisoned Pen Press.
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