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The Curse
Of Gundam Wing Fan-Fiction Addiction
by D.C. Logan
(maxwells_salvage@oocities.com)
(Adapted from "LITERATURE ABUSE:
AMERICA'S HIDDEN PROBLEM"—author unknown)
WARNINGS: General silliness.
THANKS: To Gundam Wing fans
everywhere.
SUMMARY: What we all are
or will be... |
Once a relatively rare disorder,
Gundam Wing Fan-Fiction Addiction, or GWFFA, has risen to new levels due
to the ease of accessibility of Internet mail lists, extensive archives
for fan fiction, and the rapid increase of personal and author-driven websites.
The number of Gundam Wing fan-fiction addicts is currently at record levels.
Abusers become withdrawn, uninterested
in society or normal relationships. They fantasize, living in or creating
alternative worlds to occupy, to the neglect of friends, family, work,
school, and the slowly dying plants in the living room. They spend hours
debating assorted and sundry relationship pairings, merits of different
styles of writing, and favorite rants. They trade website URLs,
prowl through thousands of links, read recommendation pages, and buy doujinshi
with funds previously reserved for college tuition or next month's car
payment.
Self-test for GWFFA: How many
of these apply to you?
-
You read fiction when depressed to cheer
yourself up.
-
You go on reading binges where you read
all day or night.
-
You read early in the morning, before
school or work.
-
You print stories to carry around so
you can continue to read when off-line.
-
You avoid friends or family obligations
in order to read fan fiction.
-
You take vacation or sick days from
school or work and spend the day catching up on mailing lists or reading
through archives.
-
At a party or when you have company
in your home, you will often slip off unnoticed to read or check the latest
post to your lists.
-
Reading has made you seek haunts and
companions that you would otherwise avoid.
-
You neglect personal hygiene or household
chores until you finish a story.
-
You spend money meant for necessities
on a faster modem or cable connection instead.
-
You attempt to circumvent a password-protected
site to read the fiction archived there.
-
You start your own website, recommendation
list, email list, or archive.
-
Most of your friends are heavy fan-fiction
readers.
-
You instantly recognize the pen names
and email addresses of more than eighty percent of your best friends (and
have no idea what their real names are, where they live, or how old they
may be—and it doesn't affect your friendship in any way).
-
You have broken down emotionally while
reading a story and had to explain to friends, family, or co-workers why
you were crying.
-
You wept or become angry or irrational
because of something you read on a list.
-
You sometimes wish you did not read
so much.
-
Sometimes you think your fiction reading
is out of control.
-
Lime, lemon, citrus, and enough lumber
dimensions to confuse the guy at Home Depot (1x2/3x4/2x4x6)—if it all makes
sense to you—you've been reading too much fan fiction.
-
You have joined author lists or written
to authors to solicit more material.
-
You commission artwork to match the
stories you read.
-
You go on vacation and haul the computer
along—or you leave it behind and need to take an equal number of days off
after
your vacation to catch up on your reading.
-
You immediately understand any and all
references that relate to "Episode Number ___" that you encounter in fiction
headings.
-
You have Pocky or Gummy candy on your
desk to enhance your reading experience and keep you focused and awake.
-
You play the soundtracks from the series
in the background for the same reason.
-
You watched both subbed and dubbed versions
of the series to better understand the fiction you read.
-
You know enough Japanese to understand
the occasional words that crop up in fan fiction, you can watch the series
without reading the subtitles, and you're thinking about learning enough
Kanji to finally be able to read your doujinshi.
-
Email just isn't fast enough. You start
to lounge in chatrooms to discuss fan fiction or call friends directly.
(Is your monthly long-distance phone bill over $100? —take an extra point.)
If you answered "yes" to three or
more of these questions, you have symptoms of GWFFA. An affirmative response
to five or more indicates a serious problem.
Related Disorder #1: The Gundam
Wing Fan-Fiction Author
Within the sordid world of fan fiction
addiction, the lowest circle belongs to those sufferers who have thrown
their lives and hopes away to actually write the stuff (you know who you
are). These poor wretched souls while away endless hours in front of their
keyboards composing grand epics involving cartoon characters ranging in
age from 15 to 20—many involving risque and outlandish behaviors.
Related Disorder #2: The Gundam
Wing Fan-Fiction Artist
This is usually a milder form of
the addiction. Artists typically have more of their lives based in reality
than authors do. But they still spend countless hours sketching characters
along the borders of whatever page they happen to have in front of them,
or scanning and applying Photoshop filters to their best advantage. If
you have a room dedicated as a Gundam Wing studio, or purchased a faster
computer to run more advanced software, you are in danger of sliding into
the GWFFA abyss. If you have hit the point where commission sales require
you to submit a tax return—consider yourself beyond all redemption.
Related Disorder #3: The Gundam
Wing Doujinshi Collector
The second lowest circle belongs
to those who scrounge the Internet auction sites and have to download new
character sets into their browsers to view pages in Japanese. They do this
so they can fulfill their uncontrollable urge to spend vast amounts of
cash to purchase foreign money orders and have comic and art books shipped
to them from all over the world. They store their prizes in a box or cabinet
that is hidden under their bed so their parents/spouse/roommate can't find
them. And if they're lucky, they'll never have to explain to someone why
they spent hundreds of dollars on books that they will never be able to
read. So if your current collection numbers more than twenty, if "circle"
means something to you and you can name more than five of them, and you
collect by the pairings—you qualify as a serious case.
Related Disorder #4: The Creator
Of Websites
These poor souls spend endless hours
running the same queries through different search engines in the pursuit
of new and interesting authors to archive or websites to link to. They
learned the essentials of HTML and dedicate the vast majority of their
free and not-so-free time constantly updating, correcting, and searching
for new and better material to add to their sites. If you maintain more
than one site, or if you have your own GW-related domain name—you probably
have no life outside of the fandom.
You may be dealing with a life-threatening
problem if one or more of the following applies:
-
You named your child, pet, car, or other
significant inanimate objects after a character in the series.
-
All of your personal passwords are Gundam
Wing related.
-
You track down all other work done by
your favorite voice actors—both Dub and Sub versions.
-
The "Law of Fives" takes over your life.
Five characters on an unrelated show, five guys at the table next to you
at Denny's, five kittens in a box, five cars in the parking lot—and you
feel compelled to assign a specific pilot to each one.
-
You start to dress as your favorite
character.
-
Your family/friends/co-workers know
a fair bit about Gundam Wing and perhaps even some of your favorite authors
and Internet friends—and they've never watched the series.
-
You travel great distances, use all
of your available vacation/sick time, and outlay great sums of cash just
for the simple opportunity to meet favorite authors, artists, close Internet
friends, and drop huge wads of cash on doujinshi you never knew existed
at the regional anime conventions.
For partners, parents, and friends
of the afflicted:
-
Talk to the GWFFA victim in a loving
and supportive manner. Let them see that you are concerned for their well
being. However, you are not going to send them to Japan or to enroll them
in the regional anime club as this may escalate the affliction or increase
the intensity of the symptoms.
-
Face the issue: Tell them what you know,
and how: "I found this comic book with pictures of naked boys hidden in
the box under the rollerblades in the upstairs guest bedroom. How long
has this been going on?"
-
Try to show your support in another
way. Do your level best to interest them in a less-popular fandom or in
a (gasp) live-action series. Buy them musical instruments or a car.
Do what you have to do. Unplug the
computer; cancel the Internet service; ban the purchase of any Gundam Wing–related
merchandise. Destroy all the DVDs, VHS tapes, figurines, manga, doujinshi,
music, posters, and assorted keychains, pins, and sundry articles with
big-eyed animated faces. It will hurt them; and they might leave you—but
it may be the only way to preserve that little bit of sanity they have
left.
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