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Exposing Hollywood's anti-German agenda

I'm not ashamed to be religious or a liberal

'Beat Me with a Stick' Elmo and other great toys

Making a difference: why I do what I do

Telemarketing ban has ended a great pastime

I don't rule the world, and that's fine with me

Making the journey from prejudice to understanding

There's no comparing genocide and killing geese

All that's left is an empty feeling

An unrequited love for some really neat words

Foster dads offer hands and hearts ... for the time being.

Thanksgiving dinner and other forms of ritual madness.

Zen and the art of not getting run over by a Mack truck

A lifetime of regrets as another year goes down the tubes

Reform Party Convention ends in shoot-out

Virtual immortality isn't all it's cracked up to be

Insider's look at the Republican National Convention turns up many surprises

Car Repair for Dummies, Part One: This is a Car

Sadness marks the passing of a beloved mattress

At last, something worse than 'Jane Eyre'

Every town has a story. Tombstone has a fixation.

Forget the Trekkies, the real nutcases are on the Luce

Chalk one up for the faceless restaurant customers

Feeling sick? Maybe it's time to get a shave.

Guest Writer: Toto, I don't think we're in Mayberry anymore

Guest Writer: The need for speed

Does this mean we won't get free popcorn anymore?

Out of the way, Martha Stewart -- I'm in the kitchen now

How I'm surviving my brush with 'Jane Eyre'

First blizzard of the year evokes frivolous memories, no deep thoughts

Isn't it time to jump on the bandwagon with the Real Thing?

Forward this column and you can turn e-mail into $300!

Trips to the moon, disaster figure in mildew prognostications

True confessions (more or less) of a closet survivalist

Who understands what dreams may come?

Hey, everyone, look -- it's an elephant!

Wouldn't 'Senator Learn' have a nice ring?

To my little girl: while you're sleeping . . .

Special Report: Entering the Baby Zone

Battling the suburban white whale

Wanted: Politician to tackle key issues

Something else to worry about this fall

Wanted: Dumber Mice and Better Mouse Traps

One More Stop on the Road to Adulthood

Follow the fashion leads of the journalist from Krypton

This is why naming children by committee never caught on

Psoriasis may be ugly, but at least it doesn't leave scars

Another casualty of the ancient family curse

Quest for baby names too big to handle

How the seniors taught me to get down

And don't forget your scarf when you go inside

Guest Writer: No room for Paradise as vandals force Dew Drop Inn to close

The samba of the mad Vulcan

Maybe I could be directed by Spielberg

The aliens in Rhode Island don't want you to read this

Voice of nostalgia is a call to destruction

My wife is having the baby, but I look pregnant

The end of the world as we know it

Run for the hills - Y2K’s a’comin’ fast

What's in a name? Shakespeare had no idea

Don't waste your energy on the 'gas out'

Career choice leaves a lasting mark

One Easter leftover, hold the ham please

 
  Psoriasis may be ugly, but at least it doesn't leave scars

Something about a medical condition brings out the nascent expert in everyone. It doesn't matter if you have the hiccups or acute appendicitis; once people see you have a problem, they're all over you with advice.

I know this because I have psoriasis, a stress-related condition that produces dry skin flakes that rain from my scalp and arms like the dandruff from hell. The flakes themselves leave behind unsightly raw patches of skin, which attract questions and sometimes concern over what happened to me.

Personally, I prefer the questions to come from children, who assume I have some sort of "booboos." No adult would ever believe me that an airplane hit my head, or that Niki rubs my arms with sandpaper to leave them all rough and crusty.

One boy at church to whom I've told the latter story several times recently wised up to my fallaciousness. He wants to know what Niki really does to me.

Adults usually assume I have poison ivy. Now I'm aware people can get poison ivy in unusual places, particularly when they're out in the woods without toilet paper, but don't you think it would be a little odd to rub poison ivy all over your scalp, back, arms and legs?

I'll admit I do some weird things, but having a poison ivy fetish just isn't one of them.

To my knowledge, the only real cure for psoriasis is ultraviolet light; everything else -- like coal tar, topical steroids or whatever else -- simply makes the affected skin more sensitive to that light. But that doesn't stop all sorts of other remedies from hitting me on all sides.

"Yessir, I once had psoriasis, but then I found by rubbing a quart of 10W30 motor oil into it and wrapping it in a fresh boneless chicken breast every day, I was able to clear it right up," said one fellow. "If you like, I can get a chicken poultice for you right now."

Um ... no thanks.

"There must be some sort of antibiotics they can give you," another person said.

Well, no, not really. Antibiotics fight infections, not genetic conditions, and I don't want someone rewriting my DNA. That's too "Gattaca." Unless they give me some sort of superpowers. If they help me grow a nice rack of antlers, or give me the superhuman ability to read road maps, gene splicing would be okay.

"Maybe they could irradiate your skin to get rid of the psoriasis," another person once suggested.

Not. Psoriasis is bad enough; I don't want skin cancer too.

"Skin grafts."

Puh-lease!

Despite the homegrown quacks, there are some people with legitimate success stories I want to look into, usually involving one topical cream or another. Phil Murphy, a fellow missionary I knew in Haiti, had something that worked just fine for his wife.

"Lonnie used to have psoriasis like you," Phil said. "But it all cleared up when she gave birth to Michelle."

That would be really handy in another two months if I were the one pregnant, but since Niki is carrying the baby, somehow I doubt it will help me much at all. If anything, the increased responsibility will just make my psoriasis flare up even more.

My experiences with psoriasis go back 12 years, when I was an exchange student in Rotorua, New Zealand. The first patch I ever grew was located on my lower back and was about the size of a silver dollar. It finally cleared up when I was in college, but not before my scalp had erupted in it.

Since college, work-related stress has caused the psoriasis to flare up again and again. It's all over my scalp, where it's mostly covered by my hair, except on the top of my forehead and behind my ears.

I have other spots the size of small pancakes on my arms and legs, a particularly large one Niki refers to as "the goose egg" and enough smaller ones on my arms, legs, sides, back and stomach that I look like a living connect-the-dots puzzle.

Once or twice we've tried looking for shapes like people often do with clouds.

"Does that look like a camel to you?"

"No, it looks more like Mount Rushmore. See? Here's Washington's head, and Lincoln's ..."

In biblical times, people with psoriasis were considered lepers and consigned to leper colonies, where they would spend their lives as social outcasts, and eventually get the real thing. Today, that's only true of a little less than one person in three.

Niki is a traditionalist, however, and wants me to ring a bell as I walk about and shout "Leper outcast unclean," the treatment the Bible prescribes for lepers in Leviticus 13.

In the end, I'm told it will all become moot. Apparently psoriasis eventually fades away with age, so by the time I'm 80, I'll just have to worry about liver spots instead.

David Learn is managing editor of the Hillsborough Beacon. Permission is given to forward this article, but please leave this notice intact.

"Scarred for Life" is written by David Learn, Copyright © 1999 - 2002 and appears here by permission. All technical content of this site is Copyright © 1999 - 2002 by Blair Learn.