...Aren't all people, or at least a large majority, "technically" mentally ill?
Also, since I did not take the opportunity to say so before when you brought it up - I think what you did was a very brave thing. Opening myself up to people, especially in large groups, is something I cannot do at all. IRL, that is. Talking about my problems is a bit easier online, but there's still that nagging "guilty" feeling whenever I try to.
Anyway, you gain +10 admireity from me.
Ahh, thank you <3
Well, in my case it was to explain that I'd been saddled with something other than the usual depression/anxiety/paraphilia/whatever thing that the majority of the population falls/trips into--which is indeed quite problematic for me from time to time, but deal-withable. The class was attempting to use the pejorative label of mental illness to write off the opinions of people that they didn't like. So I basically let them know that unless they wanted to call me a flaming nutbag whose opinions didn't matter, they'd better argue on different grounds.
And, surprisingly enough, it worked.
IIRC, there was an episode of something on NPR when they were talking about biases. Essentially how the average person's response to people with different opinions went something like this:
If you know nothing about the person, you assume they are ignorant about the topic.
If you know they know about the topic, you assume they are misled by someone/something.
If you know they know about the topic and came to their own conclusions, you assume they are of lower intelligence than yourself.
If you know they know about the topic, came to their owns conclusions and are intelligent people, you assume they are insane and/or are unable to think reasonably.
Which is somewhat humorous in that the more you know about the other person's argument, the closer to flamewar status are your sentiments about them in order to preserve your own beliefs. As much as people like to think we are mostly rational in our thought processes, we really are pretty horrible at critical thinking when it comes to examining our own beliefs. Our brains are good at coming up with decent sets of belief, but are bad at sharing the reasoning behind them for proofreading.