I'm also reading Ghosty Men, a very small non fiction book, not new, about the Collyer brothers and the author's Uncle Arthur. He's been roundly criticized for too much on Uncle Arthur and not enough on Homer and Langley, but there's enough in this tiny book on Homer and Langley that I did not know and I like Uncle Arthur. This appears to be some sort of anomaly, this collecting thing, and passed down. In most of the cases, the parents also "collected" different things.
What are YOU reading? Is anybody reading the new Zafon?
Yes the collecting thing is
some sort of an anomaly - Found this yesterday when I was clearing out lots of 'stuff' - Can't think why I kept it....
Secret of compulsive hoarding revealedDo you know one of those people who just can't resist filling up every nook and cranny with junk? Now you can impress dinner party guests by revealing that compulsive hoarders may have a problem in their right mesial prefrontal cortex.
Steven Anderson of the University of Iowa and his team studied a group of pathological collectors. They found that damage to the frontal lobes of the brain impaired judgement and caused emotional disturbances. But only when the injury extended to the right mesial prefrontal cortex, did the patients develop a serious collecting habit too. Anderson told a meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in New Orleans this week.
Previous work in rodents shows that more prinitive subcortical brain regions produce the drive to collect food or useless objects. No matter how much they have stashed away, animals will just go on collecting.
We have the same basic drive, says Anderson. But the right mesial prefrontal cortex can normally discriminate between something of value and something that's useless, and keeps the drive in check. When it is damaged the more primitive collecting drive comes to the fore.
from New Scientist 15 November 2003
This could explain the collecting habits of people like the Collyers - judging by the amount of 'stuff' I've accumulated over the years I guess that at some stage I damaged my own right mesial prefrontal cortex. What about you !