Hey if you're not physically disabled and just ND, please don't say "cr*ppling," or any variations thereon, since it's ableist toward physically disabled people. "Disabling," and "incapacitating," are two better words to use instead.
(It took me a while to figure it out; anon was bothered by this post.)
Okay, sure, Iâll try to do that. That said, I want to encourage people engaged in anti-ableism efforts that take the form of asking people not to use certain words to put their energies elsewhere. Firstly, I think they make the disability advocacy community inaccessible to a lot of people, since having to relearn which words are âallowedâ is overwhelming and particularly difficult for people who have limited access to words in the first place.
Secondly, every time Iâve seen this implemented itâŚhasnât made anyone less ableist? People who scrupulously remove âcrazyâ from their vocabulary in favor of âirrationalâ still treat the people theyâre talking about like unpersons. Often the recommended replacement words are just as good at suggesting âless valuable personâ as the words they replaced. I think thereâs some value in asking âdoes our use of words surrounding disability to mean âbad thingâ come from a place of treating disabled people like tragedies?â and often it does, but that doesnât mean that challenging that mindset is as easy as changing out the words. Thirdly, I think it emphasizes the wrong concerns. I saw a newspaper headline the other day saying âthe presidentâs plan will be a crippling blow to the economyâ and one about the âcrippling burden of student debtâ. Iâd think that the fact the presidentâs plan includes making it harder to get SSI, or the fact disabled students are way less likely to graduate and likelier to end up in debt, is a much more urgent problem than the turn of phrase used in the headline.Â
Lastly, it seems like the anti-words advocacy often pretends at a false consensus in disability activism. There are physically disabled people who are bothered by that newspaper headline and those who are not. There are mentally ill people who are bothered by use of crazy and some who couldnât care less. But no one ever says âhey, that word bothers me personally because people have used it to be mean to meâ, they say âitâs ableist towards physically disabled people,â as if all physically disabled people agree on this (or as if the ones who disagree are just obviously confused poor souls and donât merit a mention). âThere are physically disabled people who dislike the phrase âcrippling anxietyâ and there are physically disabled people who donât care and there are physically disabled people who have, themselves, described their anxiety as cripplingâ is much more accurate, but less compelling.