my strange addiction to my strange addiction
I started bingeing on Mad Men a few months ago and finished season four, the last Netflix has to offer, Tuesday night. I love the show for
all the reasons critics do—the writing, the exquisite
muted painting that is each art-directed frame. All the characters
simultaneously perpetuate and are broken by the worst of what mid-century
America has to offer. There’s a great scene in which sexpot Joan and career girl Peggy smoke a cigarette and finally admit to each other that they work with a bunch of pigs who take them for granted. But it’s not just the girls who have it bad—Don
has the instincts of a good man, but he’s always pushing them down with his desire to be the cool guy in the fedora.
But the real reason I like the show is because everyone is so wonderfully unhappy. Advertising
preys not only on people’s existential dissatisfaction, but on their insecurity
as well—their belief that just beyond the gate, other people are happy. All the fucking time. And that gate is a Lucky
Strike cigarette or a pair of Topaz pantyhose. And the proof of the lie of
advertising is the entirety of Mad Men. I
watch it as my own antidote to the world of forced happiness.
Cigarettes: the perfect prop for your existential dissatisfaction. |
My Strange Addiction is
no Mad Men. It’s not even American Idol. Like all TLC shows, it’s
one step up from a snuff film. But, like Mad
Men, it promises me that things are not just peachy for everyone, and I’m a
sucker for that message, as uncomfortable as my schadenfreude makes me.
For the uninitiated, every episode profiles two people with
odd, compulsive habits. It’s more about compulsion than addiction, despite the title.
Inevitably, one of the people eats weird shit: household cleaner (Comet,
judging by the green can whose label they never show), hair follicles, couch cushions.
The other person might lay in a tanning bed three times a day or bleach her
skin twenty times or own two hundred pairs of shoes.
Lately I’ve been torn between wanting to get the most out of each day and wanting to collapse into an exhausted heap. There’s no bigger waste of time than shutting yourself in the bathroom for two hours to pull out your own hair or pick at your scabs, but sometimes the world outside that small safe place is even less appealing.
Lately I’ve been torn between wanting to get the most out of each day and wanting to collapse into an exhausted heap. There’s no bigger waste of time than shutting yourself in the bathroom for two hours to pull out your own hair or pick at your scabs, but sometimes the world outside that small safe place is even less appealing.
"Scratch-Free" does not apply to your teeth. |
As I told Andrew at work the next morning, “There but for
the grace of something go I. I mean, if my
parents had gotten divorced the same summer my cousin turned me on to
eating couch cushions, I probably would have consumed seven couches by now
too.”
The show sends everyone to a therapist and ends with an
epilogue, usually along the lines of “Lauren is still part of the Furry
community and doesn’t think she has a problem. But she tries to go out in
public without her mask on sometimes.” (Personally, I thought someone should
have steered Lauren toward a career in costume design. She was talented, and
if someone had pointed it out, her self-esteem might not have been so low as to
require her to hide inside a giant pink fox suit every time she wanted to go
bowling.)
They are all sort of “working on it.” And doing a lot of
backsliding, with the exception of the Comet-eater, who demonstrates the
willpower you might imagine from someone capable of regularly swallowing
bleach.
Although there is a guy who eats glass, a party trick that gets out of control, most of the people profiled are women. It’s a
generalization to say that women turn their pain inward and men turn it
outward, but it’s one I sort of buy. Dude eats light bulbs to shock his friends.
Girl surreptitiously eats handfuls of couch foam from her purse at stoplights.
Comments
"Nicole’s disorder is rare in that it’s centered around just two people: her mother and her brother. Nicole can’t stand certain things they do with their hands, like touch something softly, or when her mother says the hard “K” sound. She responds by chiding them about “soft hands,” by repeating the hand motion they made, but harder, or by loudly saying the “K” sound herself."
Thinking of you.
I am oddly stimulated by the phrase "giant pink foxt suit."
PV: It took me a minute, but...schadenfreude! And hey, if you need to go bowling in a fur suit, I won't judge.