Tales from the new millennium part two

22 min read

For four decades up to 2019, Paul Sieveking selected and wrote up weird news stories for Fortean Times. Here he concludes his round-up of his favourite reports from the first five years of the 21st century. For his selection of stories up to the turn of the millennium, see FT390:40-45, 394:46-49.

PERMANENTLY SEASICK

In July 2001, Jane Houghton, 37, from Warrington in Cheshire, went on a week-long Mediterranean cruise starting in Palma, Majorca, with her husband and teenage son. Halfway through the trip she became seasick. “In the evenings, when we were on dry land having a meal, I would continue to feel as if I were out at sea. In restaurants the tables would bob and weave about. I felt like I was constantly walking on a trampoline.”

The feeling continued after she returned home. Her doctor prescribed anti-motion seasickness tablets and later anti-depressants, neither of which helped. An MRI scan failed to show a brain tumour. “The sensation of being on rough seas was constant, no let up, even when lying down,” she said. “Everyday tasks like using a computer, ironing, vacuuming, all increased the level of motion I felt.” She began to feel suicidal, quit her job as an office manager and now works two days a week.

Searching the Internet, Mrs Houghton found the US-based Vestibular Disorders Association. She wrote to them explaining her symptoms and in February 2002 they pinpointed mal de débarquement syndrome (disembarkment sickness or MdDS), a diagnosis confirmed the following September at the National Hospital of Neurology and Neurosurgery in London. It was a relief to have a name for her complaint, but unfortunately there is no known cure. The condition, caused by a malfunction of the inner ear, is not widely recognised and is frequently misdiagnosed. “More than four years later, if anything I am worse,” she said. “I wake up and the room is see-sawing. It’s just like being on the roughest seas imaginable in a little boat. I feel as if the ground is falling away from me all the time… Raising awareness is crucial in helping suffers know that it isn’t all in their heads.” She was being treated at the Leicester Balance Centre under the guidance of Andrew Clements, a specialist physiotherapist. “No one knows why some people are susceptible,” he said. “There may be a viral component.” D.Telegraph, D.Mail, Metro, 16 Nov 2005.FT207:17

THEY’RE OUT TO GET YOU

In 2001, a scare story that tricksters posing as perfume sellers were using a knockout spray to drug and rob women spread rapidly

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles