I'd never heard "spaz" as a derogatory term before this board. IME it's slang for any of kind of hyper behaviour. Like when my cats get the midnight zoomies and go running around the house, everyone i grew up with would refer to that as "the cats spazzing out".
Natter 68: Bork Bork Bork
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Twice yesterday at the airport, airline personnel pulled April Fool's jokes. One said, "Sorry, the flight's cancelled. April Fool's!" and then the attendant said, as we landed, "Welcome to Seattle!"
You know when those things aren't funny? When you're fucking just trying to get home.
Doing things like naming the CP association the Spastic Society doesn't lean to casual distinction between the types of CP.
Yeah, I'm 90% sure we didn't have that in the US.
I still wonder how/when it gets decided that words are OK to use, when they once had a "clinical" definition that's no longer used -- hysterical vs. retarded, say.
I know it's very offensive in England, which surprised me when I learned it since it truly means hyper (and not in a negative way) in the US.
no shit. goodness, Dana.
I get a little giggle when someone refers to a man as "hysterical." Heck, i've done it myself, then stopped, re-read my text, and laughed at myself. Certainly not implying that he has a uterus and it's floating around loose in his abdomen causing emotional problems. I think that word has altered enough in common usage that most people using it don't even know the etymology.
So we know that "hysterical" also has yucky origins. Is it also not to be used?
I think -- as with any term -- that's something an individual has to decided for him/herself, based on their comfort level and that of those around them. And I don't mean that in a snotty way; people just have to decide how they feel about dodgy language (or if something even is truly dodgy), and whether or not people around them have objected to said dodgy language, and if those objections matter to them.
I see the Spastics Society in the UK has changed its name to Scope because of that connotation. [link]
So we know that "hysterical" also has yucky origins. Is it also not to be used?
You do know that spastic is currently a term that applies to CP, just not where you live, right? I think saying "retarded" has yucky origins, or "gay" to mean lame, and should we not use them?
I think the only reason it comes up as a question is because most of the posters here aren't British. It wasn't a question when I was at school in the UK. The decision was whether or not you cared about offending people by making the association (just like some people don't care about gay or retarded) not if the association was timely or valid.
It still applies in India as well.
I started off leaning toward it's fine, but then I think, "Would it make someone (anyone) cringe if they were sensitive about their condition?" and I don't want to make anyone feel that way.
Maybe not using slang for my private parts as a synonym for wimp cringeworthy, but probably best to avoid.