A guest post from our media expert:
A recent American study has concluded that as many as a million people, worldwide, are highly addicted to playing with model railways. The condition affects mainly middle aged males some of whom are alleged to spend up to eighty hours a week, involved in what experts have described as a ‘dangerously solitary pursuit’ and ‘a compulsion that interferes with normal life.’ A significant percentage of the respondents within the study suffered from agitation when they were unable to play with trains, or missed sleep or meals to tend to their layouts, or source small industrial shunters, online. In the extreme phases of addiction, men may regard personal hygiene as a waste of time, suffer from weight gain and disrupted sleep patterns, avoid phone calls from friends and find themselves lying about time spent tinkering with low reduction gear boxes.
The men are perceived to be in danger of losing all social skills and ceasing to interact with their families altogether. ‘We don’t know where this might go in the future,’ said a commentator on a recent television chat show. ‘After all, technology is developing all the time, and we have no idea what this kind of thing might be doing to their brains. These men seem to prefer lurking in their own attics, fiddling with ever more extensive layouts, rather than socialising with the oppposite sex or interacting with other human beings.’
Playing with model railways is admitted to be a largely male pursuit. Although the average model rail enthusiast is a middle aged man, companies make a determined effort to target young children while their parents – ignorant of the dangers – purchase whatever railway books and toys their children request. The addiction is fuelled by occasional conventions at which participants are encouraged to spend large sums of money. On a recent panel show, a media celebrity announced that many mass murderers had confessed to playing with model railways at some point, thus demonstrating an unambigious connection between model railways and psychosis. She further stated that travelling by real trains was infinitely preferable. ‘It’s giving these men access to houses, strange headwear and unregulated model railway kits that’s the problem,’ she said. ‘These activities promote sexism and are as addictive as cocaine. I would never ever participate in any activity which associated model trains with entertainment. It’s an outrage.’
Experts propose that one solution to this serious problem might be to develop online railway simulation computer games, during which addicts could at least interact with others in a more sociable and productive way.
Your posts, are awesome....
very well written...i am one of your regular readers...
Posted by: Parking Games | April 07, 2011 at 11:26 AM
Nice Blog. Keep posting more
Regards
Posted by: Mario Games | April 07, 2011 at 11:35 AM
The conclusion, men are like kids, they grow up later than women do, so this is the prove, they like playing with model railways, and not only, there many others way to play.
Posted by: Miami cataract surgery | April 11, 2011 at 03:11 PM
It sounds to me like middle aged railway syndrome... otherwise known as MARS! :) I don't get it to be honest. I can appreciate a good model railway as much as the next guy. And I've been fascinated with trains since I was a wee one, but here I am at 38 years old, and I have absolutely NO desire to go out and build one for myself. But that's just me, to each their own.
Posted by: r4 ds card | May 11, 2011 at 01:49 AM
Weird, one of the guys I work with play with these model trains but I had no idea it was that iddictive...
Posted by: How do I Win the Lottery | July 14, 2011 at 04:16 AM