LITERATURE ABUSE

Once a relatively rare disorder, Literature Abuse, or LA, has risen to new levels due to the accessibility of grammar school & 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Abusers become withdrawn, uninterested in society or normal relationships.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 awkwar 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 writers.  Known as Fetal Fiction Syndrome, this disease also leaves its victims prone to a lifetime of nearsightedness, daydreaming, and emotional instability.

Heredity
It has been 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, interact in family "togetherness" 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.

Self-Test for Literature Abuse
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 dialogue 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 not choose.
11. I have neglected personal hygiene or household chores until I had 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 after a night of heavy reading.
16. I have suffered 'blackouts' or memory loss from a bout of reading.
17. I have wept, or 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 fiction 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.

Decline and Fall of 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.

Solutions

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.

2.  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?'

3.  Show her another way.  Move the television set into her room. Praise her brother, the engineer.  Introduce her to frat boys.

4.  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.


 
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