Ocean Syndrome I think we all have it

mingiz

Horse Poor
OCEAN Syndrome

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Living with O.C.E.A.N. Syndrome by Scooter Grubb

Just recently, after years of research, I have finally been able to give a name to what my wife and I have been living with for years. It's an affliction, for sure, which when undiagnosed and misunderstood can devastate and literally tear a family apart.

Very little is known about O.C.E.A.N. Syndrome. But it is my hope this article will generate interest from researchers involved in the equine and psychological sciences. You will, no doubt, begin to identify similar
symptoms in your own family and hopefully now be able to cope.

Obsessive Compulsive Equine Attachment Neurosis Syndrome (O.C.E.A.N.) is usually found in the female and can manifest itself anytime from birth to the golden years. Symptoms may appear any time and may even go dormant in
the late teens, but the syndrome frequently re-emerges in later years.

Symptoms vary widely in both number and degree of severity. Allow me to share some examples which are most prominent in our home.

The afflicted individual:

1. Can smell moldy hay at ten paces, but can't tell whether milk has gone bad until it turns chunky.

2. Finds the occasional "Buck and Fart" session hugely entertaining, but severely chastises her husband for similar antics.

3. Will spend hours cleaning and conditioning her tack, but wants to eat on paper plates so there are no dishes.

4. Considers equine gaseous excretions a fragrance.

5. Enjoys mucking out four stalls twice a day, but insists on having a housekeeper mop the kitchen floor once a week.

6. Will spend an hour combing and trimming an equine mane, but wears a baseball cap so she doesn't waste time brushing her own hair.

7. Will dig through manure piles daily looking for worms, but does not fish.

8. Will not hesitate to administer a rectal exam up to her shoulder, but finds cleaning out the Thanksgiving turkey cavity for dressing quite repulsive.

9. By memory can mix eight different supplements in the correct proportions, but can't make macaroni and cheese that isn't soupy.

10. Twice a week will spend an hour scrubbing algae from the water tanks, but has a problem cleaning lasagna out of the casserole dish.

11. Will pick a horse's nose, and calls it cleaning, but becomes verbally violent when her husband picks his.

12. Can sit through a four-hour session of a ground work clinic, but is unable to make it through a half-hour episode of Cops.

The spouse of an afflicted victim:

1. Must come to terms with the fact there is no cure, and only slightly effective treatments. The syndrome may be genetic or caused by the inhaling of manure particles which, I propose, have an adverse effect on female
hormones.

2. Must adjust the family budget to include equine items - hay, veterinarian services, Ferrier services, riding boots, and clothes, supplements, tack, equine masseuse and acupuncturist - as well as the (mandatory) equine spiritual guide, etc. Once you have identified a monthly figure, never look at it again. Doing so will cause tightness in your chest, nausea, and occasional diarrheal.

3. Must realize that your spouse has no control over this affliction. More often than not, she will deny a problem even exists as denial is common.

4. Must form a support group. You need to know you're not alone - and there's no shame in admitting your wife has a problem. My support group, for instance, involves men who truly enjoy Harley Davidson's, four-day weekends, and lots of whiskey. Most times she is unaware that I am even gone, until the precise moment she needs help getting a 50 pound bag of grain out of the truck
 
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luckystar

Guest
Y'all don't pay someone for that shoulder-deep rectal exam?
 

appaholic

New Member
That is so funny! Just this morning I yelled at one of the boys to use a paper plate because we needed to get going and I had no time for dishes, but I could stop by the barn feed, clean stalls and groom!
 

Wait4It..boom

New Member
I don't even mop the kitchen floor THAT often! :O) And I buy the aluminum lasagna pans and toss 'em b/c I will not be cleaning out that dish either! ahaha.... so many others were applicable too.... i like that one. good post, Mingiz!
 

Scootershoots

New Member
OCEAN Syndrome

It pleases me that so many have enjoyed my tongue n cheek review of my wife and some of her friends. I wrote OCEAN Syndrom in 2006 and it has since been around the world several times showing up in newsletters and on website frequently. I designed a T-shirt and some trinkets for those who really want to be proud of their incurable affliction. Just follow the link below.
Thanks again for the Grins you have all given me with your comments.
Scooter
badscootie: OCEAN Syndrome: Zazzle.com Store
 

Eventer29

New Member
Funny and Too true!! I am def a paper plate girl..Don't do dishes...I often say that I would rather pick up horse poo with my bare hands than touch dirty dishes..and most of the time its true. I call my bf in the morning to ask him if the milk is still "safe" cause I cant tell.
 
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