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Abnormal Definition - Labeling Process for Mood Disorders

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What is the labeling process of defining mood disorders as abnormal?

Is there ANY abnormal behavior that would be considered as abnormal under all possible circumstances?

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This solution explains the labeling process of defining mood disorders as abnormal. It also discusses if there is any abnormal behavior that would be considered as abnormal under all possible circumstances.

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1. WHAT IS THE LABELING PROCESS OF DEFINING MOOD DISORDERS AS ABNORMAL?

First let’s look briefly at the potential problems inherent in the definition of abnormal behavior. What is abnormal behavior? Well, there is no one right answer. Many definitions exist but none are entirely satisfactory. One definition is that abnormal behavior is any that deviates from central tendencies, like the mean, for example. By this definition, abnormal behavior would be any that is statistically deviant. For example, if most of the population smoked, but you did not, then not smoking would be considered abnormal. There are obvious problems with this definition. For instance, what happens to the definition when the popularity of a behavior shifts. Or, more tellingly, what if the majority's behavior is obviously pathological. This last point is explored in the movie, "The King of Hearts ," where, during World War I, the main character sides with the "insane" inhabitants of a lunatic asylum, instead of his "sane" fellow soldiers. One readily sees that the majority can often be quite abnormal.

Another similar definition is deviation from socio-cultural norms, not statistical ones. In this definition, abnormality is when one violates behaviors that most consider proper. For example, not shaving, not going to church, and so on, would be abnormal. The difference between this definition and the previous one is that it is not the prevalence of the behavior that makes it normal, but rather the perception of propriety instead.
Other definitions are based on individuals instead of groups. For example, if a person feels uncomfortable in situations where others do not, then that person may be maladjusted. Similarly, a person may feel distress in situations where others do not. Or, a person may react in a less mature fashion than others do in particular situations. Edwin Arlington Robinson's poem "Richard Cory" exploits these individualistic kinds of definitions. In that poem, Richard Cory is cast as a man who has everything a person could possibly want. Yet, in the end, he commits suicide.

Another possible definition is simply being in trouble: trouble at home, work, school, or with the law, for example. When other people start to notice that you cannot adequately deal with your responsibilities, you may be in trouble. The commercials for private mental hospitals on TV are good examples. In one, a wife is calling her husband's boss because her husband is an alcoholic, and did not come to work after lunch, again. The message at the end is that maybe it is time that he, and she, do something about their trouble, namely, call that hospital.

Abnormal behavior shows historically based symptoms. For example, in the Middle Ages, whole villages would be affected by mass hysteria in the form of dancing sickness. The villagers would dance themselves into exhaustion over a period of several days. The Italian song, "La tarantella," is an example of the music that inspired such behavior. Before you think that such episodes are past us, they are not. You may read about or see on the TV news stories about all of the workers in an entire building falling sick at the same time. Very ...

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