Bitseach Posted June 18, 2002 Share Posted June 18, 2002 Completely anecdotal but made us all laugh! Depressed man diagnosed as British. George Farthing, an expatriate British man living in America, was recently diagnosed as clinically depressed, tanked up on anti-depressants and scheduled for controversial Shock Therapy when doctors realised he wasn't depressed at all - only British. Not depressed, just British Mr Farthing, a British man whose characteristic pessimism and gloomy perspective were interpreted as serious clinical depression, was led on a nightmare journey through the American psychiatric system. Doctors described Farthing as suffering with Pervasive Negative Anticipation - a belief that everything will turn out for the worst, whether it's trains arriving late, England's chances at winning any international sports event or even his own prospects to get ahead in life and achieve his dreams. "The satisfaction Mr Farthing seemed to get from his pessimism seemed particularly pathological," reported the doctors. "They put me on everything - Lithium, Prozac, St John's Wort," said Mr Farthing. "They even told me to sit in front of a big light for an hour a day or I'd become suicidal. I kept telling them this was all pointless and they said that it was exactly that sort of attitude that got me here in the first place." Running out of ideas, his doctors finally resorted to a course of "weapons grade MDMA", the only noticeable effect of which was six hours of speedy repetitions of the phrases "mustn't grumble" and "not too bad, really". It was then that Mr Farthing was referred to a psychotherapist. Suicidal? Dr Isaac Horney explored Mr Farthing's family history and couldn't believe his ears. "His story of a childhood growing up in a grey little town where it rained every day, treeless streets of identical houses and passionately backing a football team who never won, seemed to be typical depressive ideation or false memory. Mr Farthing had six months of therapy but seemed to mainly want to talk about the weather - how miserable and cold it was in winter and later how difficult and hot it was in summer. I felt he wasn't responding to therapy at all and so I recommended drastic action - namely ECT or shock treatment". Hopeless case "I was all strapped down on the table and they were about to put the rubber bit in my mouth when the psychiatric nurse picked up on my accent," said Mr Farthing. "I remember her saying 'Oh my God, I think we're making a terrible mistake'." Nurse Alice Sheen was a big fan of British comedy giving her an understanding of the British psyche. "Classic comedy characters like Tony Hancock, Albert Steptoe and Frank Spencer are all hopeless cases with no chance of ever doing well or escaping their circumstances," she explained to the baffled US medics. "That's funny in Britain and is not seen as pathological at all." Identifying Mr Farthing as British changed his diagnosis from 'clinical depression' to 'rather quaint and charming' and he was immediately discharged from hospital, with a selection of brightly coloured leaflets and an "I love New York" T-shirt. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~My karma will run over your dogma~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Taikudo-ka Posted June 18, 2002 Share Posted June 18, 2002 Classic. Must have been written by a Brit. KarateForums.com - Sempai Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bitseach Posted June 18, 2002 Author Share Posted June 18, 2002 LOL - DEFINITELY! And as Homer Simpson is wont to say, "It's funny because it's true" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~My karma will run over your dogma~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Taikudo-ka Posted June 20, 2002 Share Posted June 20, 2002 But like all British humor it has a double edged sword - who exactly are they taking the mickey out of? KarateForums.com - Sempai Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lau gar Posted June 20, 2002 Share Posted June 20, 2002 lol blue belt Lau Gar Kung fu"know your enemy" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ckdstudent Posted June 20, 2002 Share Posted June 20, 2002 Well, us Brits only see it as a single edged sword. We know exactly who we're laughing at. ---------Pil SungJimmy B Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bitseach Posted June 21, 2002 Author Share Posted June 21, 2002 Ourselves of course [ahem] Taikudo - take as a Zen thing if you want. There is no one answer. Self-deprecating humour, such as Britons enjoy so much almost always gently prods the other person. That's why it's so much fun. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~My karma will run over your dogma~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Taikudo-ka Posted June 22, 2002 Share Posted June 22, 2002 Except Ali G, who somehow struck in three directions at once. But anyway... KarateForums.com - Sempai Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bitseach Posted June 27, 2002 Author Share Posted June 27, 2002 now THAT'S Zen! LOL ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~My karma will run over your dogma~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
senna_trem Posted February 19, 2005 Share Posted February 19, 2005 I know a joke that makes fun of the french and people from the maritimes of canada. It may be my best joke ever. "I think therefore I am" Rene Descartes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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