LETTER OF THE WEEK
o7 With all the praise and criticism coming Dr. Laura Schlessinger’s
way after her recent run-in with the owner of the Beach Access surf shop
in Costa Mesa, one reader wonders what would happen if the citizen Laura
Schlessinger called Dr. Laura, the radio talk show hostess. Here’s his
impression on how the dialogue might unfold:
f7
Dr. Laura: Hello, you are on the air, how may I use your troubles to
sell commercials?
Caller: Yes, hello Dr. Laura, I will get straight to my question, but
first let me set the scene. I took my son shopping at the mall and, while
waiting in a surf shop for him to try on some clothes, I picked up a
magazine, looked inside, and discovered material objectionable to me. I
asked the store manager to remove the magazine that I found to contain
the objectionable material. He refused. My request became my demand.
Dr. Laura: Was the store a legitimate retail establishment and was the
magazine legal?
Caller: Yes, it is a regular place, and yes, the magazine is legal.
Dr. Laura: Well then, you should have yanked your son from the
dressing room and marched right out of that store, never to return.
Caller: I did that.
Dr. Laura: Then, my dear, how can I help you?
Caller: The thing is, I am a powerful media figure, and I used my
position as a beacon of light to call for a boycott of this little store.
I decided to use my vast resources to scorn and ridicule the store
because it did not meet my strict moral standards. Now everyone is
reacting by heaping scorn and ridicule upon me when all I want is to make
things perfect in this world. My question is, wasn’t I right to ridicule,
scorn and call for a boycott of this store?
Dr. Laura: No. You overreacted to an otherwise negligible incident.
You should have just left the store, not used your media position to
attack a legitimate store for your own sense of decency. Why did you make
it a federal case in the first place?
Caller: Even legal and legitimate sources of objectionable material
should be eradicated because I want the world to be a perfect place, safe
for all children and other creatures. This store needs to be taught a
lesson that when material is objectionable to me, it should be considered
objectionable to all, I mean it.
Dr. Laura: You know, I hear someone who is a controlling person. A
controlling person wants everything to be their way, just perfect. This
search for perfection is sometimes a means to hide their shame. By trying
to be perfect and demanding a perfect world with perfect people, a
controlling person seeks to atone for their past sins by overcompensating
their virtues now. Are you trying to cover up a less than perfect past?
Caller: Well, I have done things that I would not tolerate in others
now, like taking nude photos. But what does that have to do with
squashing this cockroach of a store whose manager ignored my demand for a
measure of decency?
Dr. Laura: You have a conflicted personality common to many
sinner-to-saint converts. Does the word “hypocrite” mean anything to you?
I suggest you apologize, drop the issue, and seek therapy to deal with
your hidden shame. Learn to cope with your own imperfection and the
imperfection of others. In time you may learn how to live like a tolerant
human being. Time for a break.
Shant Agajanian
Newport Beach
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