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Newly Discovered Disorders – Part 1

 

Most of us have heard of Seasonal Affective Disorder or SAD, a serious condition that affects people during the winter months and can result in severe depression. In an article published in The Globe and Mail in summer 2005, career advice columnist Wallace Immen identified SAD's (humorous) summertime counterpart: Seasonal Distractive Disorder, a condition that causes one's productivity to drop when the sun is shining (and one is stuck at work).

We've discovered a few more workplace-related conditions. Here are the first four:

• Pre-Vacation Fugue State – Like a traditional fugue state, in this condition, an individual suddenly abandons a present activity or lifestyle and starts a new one for a period of time. Typical onset is several days prior to vacation, during which time sufferers abandon their regular work, and spend their time in a fog of obsessive minutia, trying to do laundry, pack, obtain toiletries, ensure that the dog is booked at the kennel, arrange for transport to the airport, exchange currency, confirm flights, etc. In rare instances where the individual engages in work activity, s/he is semi-functional, existing in a dreamlike state of altered consciousness, obsessed with fantasies about the upcoming trip.
• Post-Vacation Misplaced Mind Syndrome – This disorder is also known as Post-Vacation Fugue State. In this condition, individuals are in a dreamlike state, brought on by exhaustion (perhaps exacerbated by jetlag) and overindulgence of every variety, and plagued by recurring visions (and sometimes hallucinations) of the recent vacation.
• Post-Vacation Grief – This condition has five stages: Denial (that the vacation is over); Anger (that the vacation is over); Bargaining (that maybe if you call in sick for just one day, the vacation isn't really over); Depression (because the vacation really is over); Acceptance (as you stand crushed in the subway car, or stuck in commuter traffic, that the vacation really is over).
• Other Day of the Long Weekend Tunnel Vision – This rare visual disorder occurs only a few times each year (e.g., the Friday of the Labor Day weekend). During this day, individuals typically find that they can only see fanciful visions of other places and times, particularly those of the immediate past or future. Sufferers also report that time slows down. (NB: Some scientists suggest that this is an anomaly of the physics and/or the time-space continuum, rather than of the mind.)

Also see: Newly Discovered Disorders – Part 2 and Newly Discovered Disorders – Part 3.

 

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Article published on Sep 26 05 12:59AM.

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