Hi Abyss - If there is any treatment you want to try, could you maybe still try to get it without that diagnosis?
I'm not sure what you mean by "incurable." Every person's feelings and personality change in many different ways over the course of their lifetime - in often unpredictable ways, that vary hugely from person to person. Just because one person has a certain experience for their whole life, doesn't mean every person will, does that make sense? Just because someone benefits from a drug or therapy doesn't mean their friend or neighbor necessarily would too. We're people, not statistics. :)
Also, how a doctor wants you to think and live may be very, very different than how
you want to think and live - for instance, very often women's anger at men, or people not wanting to always participate in normative ways in work or school, is dismissed as "sickness" by the doctor. When in fact it's very valuable and meaningful to the person. You have the right to decide what is healthy for you.
Have you had a chance to look much at writings from psychiatric survivors and people who've self-undiagnosed?
The definition of a mental disorder is a “dysfunction in the psychological, biological, or developmental processes underlying mental functioning.” Unfortunately, this definition is vague and leaves much room for debate and criticism. Since it is not entirely clear what “dysfunction” means, the...
www.youthrights.org
In Bruce Levine's career he as spoken with hundreds of people diagnosed with ODD & ADHD. An astonishing number of these people are also anti-authoritarians.
www.madinamerica.com