November 30, 2006

Apostate Disease

The apostate gland is a small organ lying somewhere near the heart. Although both men and women possess the organ, it appears to create more difficulties for men than for women. These difficulties seem to arise due to irritation from external sources, which causes enlargement and pressure on the heart. The primary symptom is a restlessness and discomfort with people with whom the patient disagrees, and hypersensitivity to having this pointed out, leading the patient to charge them with “apostasy” — hence the name of this otherwise obscure and apparently non-functional gland.

Lifestyle choices may play a role in the etiology of the illness, and Anglican Bishops appear to be especially at risk. Additional symptoms include

  • frequent urge to fulmination
  • having to get out of bed more than once in the night to check on some passage in Aquinas or Cranmer
  • unsteady, weak, interrupted or wandering stream of argument
  • hearing loss
  • being a frequent pain in the lower back or neck
  • difficulty in maintaining a seat in mixed assemblies

The ASA (Apostate Specific Antigen) test is indicative, but inconclusive of the exact nature of the underlying pathology. Benign Apostatic Enlargment may be treated with medication, but more serious forms of the disease require surgery.


Tobias Haller BSG

8 comments:

  1. Excellent summary. Perhaps you should submit for peer review & publication in the JOURNAL OF IRREPRODUCIBLE RESULTS. Thanks for the lift when I was a little weary from the journey.
    C. Watson

    ReplyDelete
  2. Way too funny for reading and drinking coffee over one's computer. Thanks

    ReplyDelete
  3. You're sunk now, Tobias. MadPriest has picked you up. There's no telling what kind of riff-raff may come visiting your previously-erudite blog now.

    But you brought it on yourself, you know? Posting such an excellent essay and all . . .

    With deepest sympathy --
    Lisa

    ReplyDelete
  4. ahh yes, the ever famous Apostatectomy...

    ReplyDelete
  5. I was warned not to be drinking anything while reading this! As with C. Watson, "Thanks for the lift when I was a little weary from the journey."

    ReplyDelete
  6. Tobias, you must have drunk your medicinal toddies, as I advised over at MadPriest's place. Or is it still the Nyquil talking?

    I hope that you feel better.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Dear Grandmère Mimi,
    Thank you for your kind note and your good advice (re the Toddies -- they do indeed make the condition more bearable). I am much improved, and prepared for Advent I tomorrow.

    I especially appreciate your note on self-care given your famous operatic namesake's tendency to tussiveness, and the odd gelida manina!

    All the best, my accustomed perkiness restored....
    T

    ReplyDelete
  8. Tobias, no tussiveness here, and gelida manina only when I'm out in the cold.

    La vie de bohème is altogether another story. How could one grow up in New Orleans without indulging in a bit of that?

    ReplyDelete

Comments are welcome, but: I ask you to identify yourself, and to • avoid mere contradiction or assertion; give reasons for disagreement • stay with the topic of the post.
Your words are yours but I reserve the right to cite them or refer to them in other contexts.
I will not post comments that are irrelevant or offensive.
Note that Blogger limits comments to 4,096 characters.