Post an analysis of the implications of the social


Parker Family Episode

Program Transcript

FEMALE SPEAKER: I want to take care of her. I really do. I mean, she's my mom, and she's not getting any younger. But I deserve my own life, my own place. And I'm always tired of feeling like I'm suffocating all the time. It's just-- It's  so confusing. I love her, you know?

FEMALE SPEAKER: I understand that you want a place of your own to live. You mentioned before that you and your mother argue a lot.

FEMALE SPEAKER: A lot? How about all the time? And all that stuff she hoards, it's just like, I'm drowning in it. It's like there's more room for her junk than there is for us. It just drives me crazy. Right to the hospital sometimes.

FEMALE SPEAKER: How many times have you been hospitalized?

FEMALE SPEAKER: Let's see. Three times in four years. I think I mentioned to you that I'm bipolar, and I'm lousy dealing with stress. Oh. Wait, um, there was another time that I was in the hospital. I tried to commit suicide. I guess I was pretty lousy at that too, otherwise I wouldn't be here.

FEMALE SPEAKER: What made you want to do it? I was a teenager. And when you're a teenager, you find a reason every day to try to kill yourself, right? I was--

I was depressed.

I remember one night I went out with some of my friends. And, um, they were all looking up at the sky and talking about how pretty the stars were. And all I could think about was that that sky was nothing more than a black eye. It was lifeless,  and it could care less about any of us.

When they finally let me go home from the hospital, my family--wow-- what a trip they were. They didn't want to talk about what I had tried to do. That was off-limits. I tried to kill myself. And I they acted like nothing ever happened. I've never told anybody that before.

FEMALE SPEAKER: Are you seeing a psychiatrist now?

FEMALE SPEAKER: Um, I go to a clinic, and I see him once a month. I also go to drop-in centers for group sessions, mostly for my depression.

FEMALE SPEAKER: What about medications?

FEMALE SPEAKER: Hell, yeah. They're my lifesaver.

FEMALE SPEAKER: What are you taking?

Post an analysis of the implications of the social construction of disability. Describe how disability can be defined as a social construct.

Explain how that relates to the perception of disability. Be specific and draw on examples from the Parker case to illustrate your thoughts. Also, describe the intersection of Stephanie's mental illness with other characteristics of her identity.

Explain how those intersections could serve to further marginalize Stephanie's place and experiences in society.

Finally, explain how such marginalization impacts her ability to make choices, use self-determination, and be an active agent with equitable status in her interactions with other professionals.

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