Mutamindian is an alternate and less ableist term for transneuro (a subset of transabled that includes things like transautistic) similar to aldernic but with your mind and / or mental experiences instead , used to describe feeling like you should have different mental attributes that you don't already have (not any disorders or neurodivergencies you don't have , that is not what this term is for , it is merely for different mental attributes you feel like you should have , they sometimes could be considered the symptoms of a disorder but they are not the disorder at all) without perpetuating stereotypes or including harmful language that some transabled people use , like saying "if you want to be autistic then just call yourself autistic and pretend to be even if you know you're actually allistic" , and without including harmful language that anti-transabled people use , like "it's ableism to consider your disorder fun or good at all" .
It's a term just for anyone who feels like their mind should be different in any way or folks who want their mind to be different in any way . This is not just about neurodivergencies , and should not be about wanting to have a disorder you don't have at all , for example someone who is puppymindian may feel like they should / want to have the mind of a puppy , or naivemindian for someone who wants to be / seem more naive . It doesn't have to be related to any neurodivergencies , but it can sort of be , which V will add in a statement towards the bottom of this post .
The suffix is -mindian , for example stimmindian / stimindian or hyperactimindian etc .
This term should NOT be used for things like "autimindian" or "BPDmindian" , rather say what mental attributes that you want that don't necessarily mean you feel like you should have a disorder but rather you feel like you should have attributes commonly associated with that disorder (like obsessimindian) , as to not further push untrue stereotypes . If you are mutamindian , that does not mean that you have a certain disorder (unless you actually do have it and are diagnosed either professionally or self-diagnose) , it is not related to what disorders you feel like you should / want to have at all . It is about mental attributes , NOT disorders .
This term was made by a disabled guy who doesn't support the label transabled , but who supports the feelings and experiences behind it .
The idea for this was originally taken from @kenochoric who coined aldernic , which this is based off of .