Edna3362 wrote:
I hate that assumption too.
At worst, they'd assume I have some particular mood disorder when it's actually just a solvable unprocessed emotional response, a hormonal issue that only happens on particular weeks or a response to stress AND physical illness/hurt/combination of anything else because it takes up my processing.
I'm very, very wary of diagnosis overshadowing myself.
Even more wary of stereotypes and assumptions such as those and more.
Thankfully, anxiety is clearly the furthest thing one would imagine me to be.
Some would assume I'm depressed; turns out I'm just fricking hormonal.
... Over a year later, I solved said unprocessed emotional issue.
Made a world of difference in existing.
The fact that I did it without professional intervention or psych meds made me an even prouder person for it.
Ultimately because I was right.
Because I'm hell sure actual mood disorders doesn't work like that.
And actual serious mental illness isn't that easy or even simple as by quieting how loud the body is even for a day, and then solving the whole thing overnight...
.. Which did happened to me.
Unfortunately, I'm still hormonal.
Still figuring it all that out because my self care routine is still almost non-existent and I'm still figuring out my crappy habits.
And my interoception taking up my mental processing space (no different from anyone with unignorable hypersensitive hearing and noise), affecting my mood and cognition remains true.