Phobias at a glance
Do
you steer clear of medical dictionaries and high-scoring
Scrabble players? Well, then you might be suffering from
hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia the fear of very long
words. This is just one of the most curious phobias, catalogued
by readers of New Scientist magazine, who learnt about
their fears through counselling companies guaranteeing a cure.
The readers
inquisitiveness brought out a whole dictionary of phobias,
including nucleomituphobia the fear of nuclear weapons,
odontophobia the fear of dentists, and Francophobia the
fear of the French.
The dictionary of
phobias emerged out of the website of a US company selling
alternative treatments.
ChangeThatsRightNow.com
points out 1,500 phobias, including paraskavedekatriaphobia
the fear of Friday the 13th, and offers "one-to-one
help" for about 1200 pounds. Other phobias in the
dictionary include Rhytiphobia the fear of wrinkles and
pentheraphobia the fear of mothers-in-law. However, New
Scientist was unconvinced, noting that, "phobias
conspicuous by their absence included "fear of silly
marketing" and "fear of repetitive websites".
Numerous British
psychologists are of the view that phobias existed for almost
anything. "Its not unusual for people to have unusual
phobias. Coulrophobia the fear of clowns is surprisingly
common," Times Online quoted Robert Endelmann, a
chartered psychologist and a patron of the National Phobics
Society, as saying.
Among the fears treated by
psychologists are learned phobias that sufferers may have
"caught" from friends or family, and phobias that may
have a deep-rooted biological trigger. "Fear of the dark,
fear of high places and fear of things that move quickly, such
as spiders or snakes it would have been useful for our
ancestors to be afraid of such things," Professor Endelmann
said. ANI
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