Literature Abuse (long)

Received in the mail this morning–no attribution:

(Wow, I scored 16. I have a problem.)
LITERATURE ABUSE: AMERICA’S HIDDEN PROBLEM

SELF-TEST FOR LITERATURE ABUSERS

How many of these apply to you?

  1. I have read fiction when I was depressed, or to cheer myself up.

  2. I have gone on reading binges of an entire book or more in a day.

  3. I read rapidly, often ‘gulping’ chapters.

  4. I have sometimes read early in the morning or before work.

  5. I have hidden books in different places to sneak a chapter without being seen.

  6. Sometimes I avoid friends or family obligations in order to read novels.

  7. Sometimes I re-write film or television dialog as the characters speak.

  8. I am unable to enjoy myself with others unless there is a book nearby.

  9. At a party, I will often slip off unnoticed to read.

  10. Reading has made me seek haunts and companions which I would otherwise avoid.

  11. I have neglected personal hygiene or household chores until I have finished a novel.

  12. I have spent money meant for necessities on books instead.

  13. I have attempted to check out more library books than permitted.

  14. Most of my friends are heavy fiction readers.

  15. I have sometimes passed out from a night of heavy reading.

  16. I have suffered ‘blackouts’ or memory loss from a bout of reading.

  17. I have wept, become angry or irrational because of something I read.

  18. I have sometimes wished I did not read so much.

  19. Sometimes I think my reading is out of control

If you answered ‘yes’ to three or more of these questions, you may be a literature abuser.

Affirmative responses to five or more indicates a serious problem.

Once a relatively rare disorder, Literature Abuse, or LA, has risen to new levels due to the accessibility of higher
education and increased college enrollment since the end of the Second World War. The number of literature abusers is currently at record levels.

SOCIAL COSTS OF LITERARY ABUSE

Abusers become withdrawn, uninterested in society or normal relationships.

They fantasize, creating alternative worlds to occupy, to the neglect of friends and family.

In severe cases they develop bad posture from reading in awkward positions or carrying heavy book bags.

In the worst instances, they become cranky reference librarians in small towns.

Excessive reading during pregnancy is perhaps the number one cause of moral deformity among the children of English professors, teachers of English and creative writing. Known as Fetal Fiction Syndrome, this disease also leaves its victims prone to a lifetime of nearsightedness, daydreaming and emotional instability.

HEREDITY

Recent Harvard studies have established that heredity plays a considerable role in determining whether a person will become an abuser of literature. Most abusers have at least one parent who abused literature, often beginning at an early age and progressing into adulthood. Many spouses of an abuser become abusers themselves.

OTHER PREDISPOSING FACTORS

Fathers or mothers who are English teachers, professors, or heavy fiction readers; parents who do not encourage children to play games, participate in healthy sports, or watch television in the evening.

PREVENTION

Pre-marital screening and counseling, referral to adoption agencies in order to break the chain of abuse. English teachers in particular should seek partners active in other fields. Children should be encouraged to seek physical activity and to avoid isolation and morbid introspection.

DECLINE AND FALL: THE ENGLISH MAJOR

Within the sordid world of literature abuse, the lowest circle belongs to those sufferers who have thrown their lives and hopes away to study literature in our colleges. Parents should look for signs that their children are taking the wrong path–don’t expect your teenager to approach you and say, “I can’t stop reading Spenser.” By the time you visit her dorm room and find the secret stash of the Paris Review, it may already be too late.

What to do if you suspect your child is becoming an English major:

  1. Talk to your child in a loving way. Show your concern. Let her know you won’t abandon her–but that you aren’t spending a hundred grand to put her through Stanford so she can clerk at Waldenbooks, either.

But remember that she may not be able to make a decision without help; perhaps she has just finished Madame Bovary and is dying of arsenic poisoning.

  1. Face the issue: Tell her what you know, and how: “I found this book in your purse. How long has this been going on?”

Ask the hard question–Who is this Count Vronsky?

  1. Show her another way. Move the television set into her room.

  2. Do what you have to do. Tear up her library card. Make her stop signing her letters as ‘Emma.’
    Force her to take a math class, or minor in Spanish.
    Transfer her to a Florida college.

You may be dealing with a life-threatening problem if one or more of the following applies:

  • She can tell you how and when Thomas Chatterton died.
  • She names one or more of her cats after a Romantic poet.
  • Next to her bed is a picture of: Lord Byron, Virginia Woolf, Faulkner or any scene from the Lake District.

Most importantly, remember, you are not alone.
To seek help for yourself or someone you love, contact the nearest chapter of the American Literature Abuse Society,
or look under ALAS in your telephone directory.

<taps mike repeatedly> Is this thing on??

Hi. My name is Jadis, and I’m a literature abuser. <sob>

:eek:

I didn’t even know I had a problem!

:sigh:

I too must confess to being an abuser from a long line of abusers. My brothers are abusers, my mother’s an abuser, my kids show every sign of being abusers…

SOMEONE HELP US!

Hi, my name is lee, and I am a literature abuser. But it has been nearly two weeks since I read a book. I fell off the wagon recently in two novel-or-more-a-day binges of over 10 novels. I confess, I am a pusher. I have loaned novels to friends and even got them hooked on new novels. I am quite a dissappointment to my mother as she reads seldom, and then only a romance and has never been emotioally dependent on a book. I even took literary criticism in college, but it was to no avail, I still love to read.

I’m … I’m so glad there are others like me out there. A support group. I need you folks. I scored a 16 as well.

Erasmus said, “If I have money, I buy books. If I have money left over, I buy food and clothing.” I used that as a motto for a long time.

I once dated a girl solely because she had the same first name as a character in a book I loved. I never told her that, of course.

When I’m at work, I keep a browser window open to gutenberg.net and I read surreptitiously while no one’s around. I wish I could stop, but I just can’t.

Someone please help me.

Um, my name is TroubleAgain, and I am a literature abuser. Sometimes I think I have it under control and then it takes over my life again. Just last night, I read a book in one sitting. It was only a small book, but…

I don’t know what you people are whining about. Sure, I read a lot… but I can quit anytime I want.

I just CHOOSE to stay up until one a.m. “just to finish the chapter.”

Hell, everyone I know is a literature abuser. (We live in a tough neighborhood.) No one really gets involved, but maybe it’s time we put a stop to it…

I once skipped a class and hid in the toilets to read an 18th century book about Wales.

That’s messed up.

::hanging head::

I’ve read 22 books since last Sunday - three separate trips to the public library. Real 300 pagers with no pictures in 'em. Staying up 'til the wee hours on work nights to finish chapters.

Does this mean I have a problem?

You… You… Bad person. A thoughtless pusher, fouling the mind of a small child, causing him to escape into worlds of words rather than face the real world. Your type should be thrown in the slammer for life. No, worse, the death sentence is the only thing your kind deservers…

Er, wait, 15 out of the 19… I think I am a pusher too, as I have often recommended a book or ten to a child in a library…

Holds his arms out and wrists together in surrender

I am guilty, take me away.

And at the age of 10, I hid in the class library section and read Ray Bradbury’s THE MARTIAN CHRONICLES instead of doing my other work.

I’ve had a problem for a very long time…

um…my name is TV and I’m a literature abuser…I want to try the 12 step porgram but everytime I try to read what the steps are…well, I’m reading again. And the next thing I know I wake up on the front step of Barnes and Noble.
I CAN’T GO ON THIS WAY!!!

It’s my mother’s fault!

Our house always had a million books, and she was always reading one or another of them. By the age of 4 1/2 I had taught myself to read (she swears I had no real help in this beyond Sesame Street) and to this day can keep track of several books at once. I have one in the bathroom, TWO by my computer, one in the living room, etc. I can also finish books remarkably fast. If I don’t finish at least one a day I feel like I’ve done something wrong (unless I’ve read a bunch of several books, the page count amounting to a book in itself, of course). I NEED my book fix.

I have a problem. But you know what? I LIKE IT. :slight_smile:

Things that might lead your child to becoming a literature abuser:

  1. Having a lot of books in your home.
  2. Telling your children bedtime stories.
  3. Reading your children bedtime stories.
  4. Visiting the library. (I know that you’re only going there to check out videos and cd’s, but beware, those things are only there to entice you into reading)
  5. Subscribing to magazines. Some purveyors of print have begun trying to induce reading in young people by producing youth oriented magazines such as Time for Kids and Ranger Rick.
  6. Watching less than 3 hours of tv each day.
  7. Playing word games such as Scrabble, Boggle, crosswords, anagrams, etc.
  8. Eating meals at the kitchen table instead of in front of the TV.
  9. Not having video game consoles in your child’s room. (Amazingly, some families make the huge mistake of not having any video games in their home. What are they thinking?)
  10. Above all, do not read in front of your kids. They will tend to imitate you.

It’s too late for me. I became addicted at such a young age and so strongly that I actually got a PhD. in children’s literature. I read thousands of children’s book to get this degree, and now I spend my days trying to induce children into becoming book addicts also. I actually get up at 5:00 am so I can read for an hour before work. I use the California power crisis as an excuse to visit the library every day–I tell people I’m just here because it’s cool and quiet, but really, does anyone beleive me? I’ve been caught insisting that my students spend 30 minutes in class reading each day, and I actually read to them. Yes, I’m a dealer. Save you children today. Avoid the behaviors on the list above.

Um, Jadis (and whiterabbit, possibly) –

Do you think having a username that comes from a fantasy novel is a danger sign?

                       --- "Tenar"

(Whoops. By the way, I’m an 18.)

And, Jadis, I love it when you call me “Dog!”

I scored a fifteen.

One of my friends once complained that her friend Deb was “so antisocial,” one the complaints being that she’d sometimes grab a book and start reading at parties. I thought “There’s something wrong with that?!?”

Hey, the only problem I have is that I spent $180 on books last week.

And I don’t get paid until a week from Friday.

I scored 18, and I have an English degree… :eek:

And I like it! :smiley: