More paper! More paper!
Mar. 18th, 2004 12:01 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I wish I could decide whether I actually want this disorder or not. Of course, just because you're writing doesn't mean you're writing well...
Telling a tale with too many words
Chantal Martineau explores hypergraphia, a rare compulsion to keep writing
Thursday March 18, 2004
The Guardian
Nnngh.
Telling a tale with too many words
Chantal Martineau explores hypergraphia, a rare compulsion to keep writing
Thursday March 18, 2004
The Guardian
Many a writer knows the pain and frustration of writer's block. The looming presence of the blank page, the gripping fear of creative sterility are only too familiar to journalists, poets, diarists or avid pen pals. Few of us, however, have experienced block's bizarre counterpart: hypergraphia. Imagine living with the compulsive need to scrawl away constantly, scribbling on notebooks, napkins, walls, even skin.(more at the link)
"Scientists don't want to discuss creativity," claims Harvard neurologist Dr Alice Flaherty, who both studied and lived with the condition. "It makes them feel intellectually unhygienic."
Her own experience with hypergraphia began when severe postnatal depression took over after she gave birth to premature twin boys who died. Paralysing grief spawned in her an uncontrollable obsession with writing. A year later, in a twist of fate, she gave birth to healthy twin girls. This second, happy pregnancy also resulted in a bout of hypergraphia. Her musings developed into a book she says she could not stop herself from writing. The Midnight Disease, released in the US earlier this year and about to be published in the UK, is a memoir-cum-study of what underlies the human drive to put pen to paper.
"On good days, ideas would wake me at four in the morning," she writes, describing how a computer screen or sheet of paper gave her the same rush that the drug paraphernalia might give a junkie. "On bad days, the words were like a charnel house through which I had to search for the bodies of people I loved."
Hypergraphia is most commonly associated with temporal lobe epilepsy, a type associated with repetitive, automatic movements in a high proportion of cases. First identified by the godfather of modern psychiatry Elim Kraepelin some 100 years ago, hypergraphia has plagued (or blessed, depending on one's perspective) some of our most prolific authors. Fyodor Dostoyevsky was probably a temporal lobe epileptic, as was Vincent van Gogh, who at his peak produced a canvas every 36 hours, writing his brother Theo up to three evocatively detailed six-page letters daily. Sylvia Plath suffered severe PMS, a condition that was known to intensify her bipolar disorder. Not only were many of her grimmest poems written at this point in her menstrual cycle, but she also committed suicide during a particularly difficult spell.
"It's not hypergraphia that makes one creative," argues Dr Peter Whybrow, Director of the Neuro psychiatric Institute of UCLA. "In van Gogh's case, hypergraphia affected and changed his way of painting ... but it didn't spur him to paint."
According to Whybrow, in mania, all behaviour is rushed and acted out in excess. Van Gogh, who had the habit of meticulously planning and sketching his canvases between manic episodes, would paint feverishly and spontaneously during them. Manic depressives with a predisposition to chronicling their lives or composing poetry are likely to engage in voluminous writing in their darkest hours.
The quality of the work produced by such people is purely accidental, says Whybrow. A number of writers as well as researchers might disagree. In her study of manic depression and its links to the artist's temperament, Dr Kay Jamison, a professor of psychiatry at John Hopkins University, established that "Two aspects of thinking are pronounced in both creative and hypomanic thought: fluency, rapidity and flexibility ... and the ability to combine ideas or categories of thought in order to form new and original connections."
Nnngh.
no subject
Date: 2004-03-18 11:04 am (UTC)I can only wish for a bout of it when I take my comps next month...