It is really easy to scoff a situation that you’re facing as “incredibly depressing”, or when you’re in a flux to regard yourself as “Bipolar”. These are bold claims that people make on a daily basis, disregarding the gravity being the true essence of the words they utter. These are mental illnesses that people are battling out while others are falling deep into and should not by any means be used in such a light tone.
In a world full of expressions and thought provoking statements, this is something that sticks out like a sore thumb.

Semantic satiation is the study of repetition and how the prolonged repetitive use of a word can lead to desensitization of the word. It loses the meaning and power it holds and just and becomes nothing more than just a few letters clumped together. Language can and does have a huge impact on our psychological well being, and this is a prime example of how it can lead to the downfall in using words and statements appropriately. With an intense increase in insistent use of incalculable superlatives, we have become a world of hyperbole. The need to be in attention, field by every source of media, has brought down the attention to real disorders in a very significant amount.
We shall be talking about mental ailments and disorders that haunt people and how they are diametrically opposite to how they are often used by the general public.
ADD
Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) is a disorder which is a subtype of ADHD and can leave people feeling socially drained and spaced out. This involves the mind being fickle enough for it to not stay focused on one particular thought or mental task. It isn’t something that comes and goes like the rain, it is something that is deeply inherent and stays. You cannot have “an ADD moment” just because you could not pay attention to your class or were forgetful about where your earphones are.

Bipolar
How often have you described a situation, even the weather as bipolar, let alone someone who is just not having their usual joyful day. To be mistreating the use of terms like Bipolar can be catastrophous. People with diagnosed bipolar disorder can have episodes of frantic mania and hypomania that can last for days and weeks. This not only affects their mood, but also their mental and physical well being. Personifying situations can be helpful when need be, but there needs to be a line drawn to using diagnostic terms in daily usage.
OCD
Just because someone is overly methodical and very calculative about how they want things to be around them, does not make them OCD. There are online blogs about “helping the OCD inside you”? It’s preposterous to even think about such a travesty! You are either diagnosed with OCD or you don’t have it. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is a mental disorder in which the patient might even be dawned by thoughts of inexplicable fear if their routine of things is not followed. It is so much more than just eccentricity and comes with tons of psychological, mental and even emotional trauma that can leave them in tatters. It is not easy living with OCD or living with someone with OCD.

Depression
Feeling depressed has been used for so long and in so many misleading situations that the word ‘depression’ has lost any and every value attached to it. Clinical depression can be crippling to people diagnosed with. With walls closing in and darkness engulfing every visual orifice of theirs, this is not a light term to be used by a measure! The idea of the bright side is tossed out of the window, as people suffering from depression are caved in by every passing moment. Depression is a medical condition that has long lasting effects. Medical marijuana has been studied to work against the negative effects of depression. Choose your favorite delta 8 cartridge here.