Jonezie
Cathlete
I know you meant no disrespect but when I see this word used so loosely. I for some reason feel offended. I have a son with special needs and a nephew who died when he was 6 but had downs syndrome with retardation. I sometimes think this word is used so often to describe people who are ignorant or moraly inept. One day during a buisness meeting someone was giving a speech and talked about how someone was so stupid he must have ridden the "yellow bus" while he was in school.
With regards to the bullying, . .my husband was severely bullied when he was in highschool and when my son was in pre-school there were kids that were not so nice to him and would do things to him because he would let them get away with it. It is wrong and mean. I hate bullies as much as I hate crazy drivers, traffic, and going to the dentist.
I hope not to start a flame war. I debated saying anything at all. This is only my opinion.
LOL, Janie! No flame war, here! It's just funny because I posted this article (which I cut and pasted straight from a publication discussing adult bullies in the workplace)...as support for another member who voiced her discomfort with the word "stupid" in another thread. She felt like "stupid" was being used too loosely and is, in today's society, too easily confused with mental disabilities to be comfortable. And the response was an overwhelming "You have no sense of humor" or "Lighten up!".
I'd like to say to you...point well taken. It's not something people take lightly. "Retarded" (even in the sense the author seemed to mean it) has become an ugly word that used to mean something but is now VERY offensive to a lot of people. I can't help but think of the word "handicapped"...a word lots of people say often and lightly but one my ex-boyfriend (who was wheelchair bound) hated and was very offended by...he preferred physically disabled.
So...I COMPLETELY understand your objection to that word, by ANY definition. And the fact that it is being used in a professional manual, instead of saying "emotionally stunted" or something like that, is proof of how unaware we all are of our words and how they might affect others.
I'm so glad you posted. It made me, and I'm sure several of us, very aware of how even the most innocent statements can be painful to others. Thanks, friend!
Jonezie