Here's something interesting from Newsweek magazine
Posted: Fri Oct 28, 2005 9:38 am
Where did the expression come from?
"BASKET CASE" meaning hysterical
The Oxford English Dictionary's first cited use of the phrase dates back to 1919: the slang referred to "a soldier who has lost both legs and arms and therefore cannot be carried on a stretcher."
Perhaps in attemps to temper the term's insensitivity, the metaphor has since morphed to milder interpretations, such as "one who has been made helpless by stress or mental illness" or "one who is emotionally or mentally unable to cope," finally resulting in today's usage as "hysterical."
"BASKET CASE" meaning hysterical
The Oxford English Dictionary's first cited use of the phrase dates back to 1919: the slang referred to "a soldier who has lost both legs and arms and therefore cannot be carried on a stretcher."
Perhaps in attemps to temper the term's insensitivity, the metaphor has since morphed to milder interpretations, such as "one who has been made helpless by stress or mental illness" or "one who is emotionally or mentally unable to cope," finally resulting in today's usage as "hysterical."