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Food Addiction Can Lead to Death
Food has been described as ambrosia and the elixir if life. For
some, eating is a biological necessity for others it is a
passion that can turn into an obsession. Experts define food
addiction to be a disorder where the addict is preoccupied...
Internet addiction!
The Internet is fast becoming just another part of everyday life, much like the TV and the computer itself. What started as something amazing, exciting, and often out of reach, has become commonplace and freely available. Technology is advancing at...
Join a Support Group and Reduce Your Stress Levels
When you are facing a particularly difficult time in your life, whether it's because you're struggling with an addiction, or perhaps because someone you love is an addict, or if you are finding life hard because you have just been diagnosed with a...
The Porn Addict Supplement, Chapter I
This article (at http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/internet-porn-nearly-cost-me-my-marriage-man-tells-forum/2005/08/07/1123353212143.html?oneclick=true) got me thinking (again) about pornography addiction. In the article a man who'd been...
Will Your Children Take a One-Way Ticket to Needle Death?
On 1 November 2002, my beautiful 20-year-old son Kristian died from a suspected Heroin overdose. There is no such thing as taking a test drive with Heroin. It's a one-way ticket. Don't let it happen to your child.
On 1 November 2002, my...
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Me and My Councilor
"Young man, sit down please.
Yes you may put your feet
up, just relax and tell me
a little bit about yourself."
I have no formal qualifications;
I have a Master Degree in
Clothing Design from some
unremembered polytechnic down
south. My mother and many
others often told me that
I have a way with people so
I ended up being a councilor
for troubled people rather
than a clothier which I was
trained to be. So much for
the educational establishment!
Good job and plenty of money
for sitting in a chair and
asking "what do you think
the problem is", whilst I
send endless text messages
to my friends.
I have until recently been
mostly involved with those
who have some sort of sexual
identity problem, not because
I have any special expertise
in the matter (I am assured
of my own position in life)
but because I am never short
of patients. So many people
in the world suffer problems
over who' they are that by
simply putting up a sign outside
my doors that says "Sex Councilor"
I have queues awaiting my
attention day after day after
day. But constantly asking
the same question of "and
do you prefer boys or girls"
to crying teenagers has worn
me down and led me to consider
a serious change in my career
path.
This change actually plonked
itself unceremoniously on
my doorstep one fine morning
under the guise of a Sunday
Newspaper. An article about
Mobile Phone Disorder (MPD)
sprung out at me and immediately
got my brain free of the typical
morning fog that usually surrounds
it. MPD is supposedly the
new addiction of the 21st
century. Teenagers and adults
alike are becoming addicted
to using mobile phones and
the art of sending text messages.
In fact the article suggested
that many users are resorting
to theft to finance their
high telephone bills, that
families cannot communicate
unless they send text messages
to each other and that many
children are becoming serious
recluses, unable to deal with
life and who have totally
shrunk inside of themselves.
I took that article aside.
I got out my mobile phone
and sent a few texts around
the world to some unseen text
friends and they all confirmed
this latest addiction. I 'text'd
well into the night till I
was too tired to move my thumb
anymore and I just dropped
off into a deep sleep at the
kitchen table with my mobile
phone continuing to beep the
rest of the night away.
The next morning after having
dealt with a load of delayed
messages on my phone, I visited
the local sign-maker and got
him to change my plaque that
had pride of place outside
my front door. By lunchtime
my new sign was ready and
fitted and it read "Mobile
Phone Disorders Treated Here".
My new career was well on
the way. The rest of the afternoon
I spent behind locked doors,
whilst I sent endless messages
to my previous patients in
the old sex category stating
that I was no longer in business
(unless they also suffered
from MPD). At nine O'clock
the next morning I was busy
with my first customer –
a fully fledged victim of
the latest addiction to afflict
our planet.
I knew from that first instance
when the young man entered
my room, his stuttering and
the endless beeps from his
pocket, that my new career
path was going to be a success.
I first of all suggested that
he could use his phone during
the session (cannot make any
addict go cold turkey) and
I had him sit in the comfortable
position. I started by asking
if he had any hobbies but
before he could answer me
his phone beeped and a desperate
pleading look entered his
eyes, I knew then that he
would be unable to concentrate
or to care about my questions
unless he had read and answered
his latest missive. So I suggested
that he continue and to pass
the time I checked my own
mobile for any messages or
calls and I replied to them
as necessary.
Anyway, time passed and before
I knew it my first customer's
time was up and he departed.
He seemed happier as he left,
less unsure and although still
tapping away on his phone
I felt that I had done some
good in the world. The next
few visitors followed a similar
routine and the money was
flowing into my cash box.
A few times I had to resort
to sending text messages to
my otherwise non-interested
visitors just to get their
attention. This was usually
to tell them that their time
was up otherwise I would never
have got rid of them
On the following Monday a
very strange thing happened;
only a week after my new career
had taken off the ground.
My new patient, a 15yr old
girl, was lying comfortably
on my couch and having had
our preliminary introductory
piece and the 'get comfortable
small talk', both of us had
got down to answering our
beeping mobiles.
I had a message from a long
time text pal that read after
text translation to, "I'm
'gonna' see a psychiatrist".
I immediately sent one back
to her asking "what for".
Eventually, after receiving
a few messages from some other
unknown text-friends I received
an unexpected reply, "for
MPD", she said but continued
with "its okay the councilor
is very nice and just lets
me text when I am in her room".
I looked up in desperation
feeling that my whole world
was falling apart, but the
girl on my couch was too engrossed
with her thumb movements to
take any notice of the visibly
distressed councilor. I was
not sure but I had to find
out so I sent her another
message asking her what her
councilors name was and ...
That Saturday I checked myself
into a specialized clinic
that suggested that within
three months I could be up
and running again and no longer
reliant on my phone for conversation.
I am not sure if I can trust
them.
About the Author
Ieuan Dolby is the Author
and Webmaster of
Seamania . As a Chief
Engineer in the Merchant Navy
he has sailed the world for
fifteen years. Now living
in Taiwan he writes about
cultures across the globe
and life as he sees it.
Resources - Link Exchange
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