Graphomania

Graphomania (from the Greek γραφωμα “writing”, “writing”) is a painful attraction to composing and writing down any texts. In fact, this is an overvalued idea (obsessive, but not dominant; unfounded at the moment, but ready to easily become reality), achieved by manic writing. As researchers of the phenomenon say: “A graphomaniac cannot do anything by halves; he will definitely cover the entire sheet. He enjoys the process of writing, experiencing something similar to satisfaction, much the same feeling experienced by a soldier after the successful completion of a battle, or by an artist watching the fruits of his creativity.”



Graphomania

Graphomania (graphism in medicine) (from ancient Greek γραφωμα - “the art of writing”, “writing”) is a pathological desire for verbose, lengthy writing in the complete absence of intellectual and emotional principles. A person becomes a maniac when he begins to uncontrollably pour out all his thoughts and experiences on paper.

It should be noted that the term “graphomania” is not medical; it was proposed by Friedrich Joseph Haase. Another name for “gaazin”, that’s what they began to call



Welcome to the world of graphomania - a type of manic state. This world is ruled by endless creativity in various forms. Graphomania is an irrepressible passion for writing, but this concept can be very narrow, since it is worth mentioning writers whose work is not considered graphomania. “Write beautifully and sincerely” is not a barrier for them. On the contrary, it is only a source of inspiration.

It’s not without reason that graphomaniac mania occupies the top positions in the ratings. The topics can be anything: novels, poems, prose texts, etc. For some, this is a creative journey that lasts years, for others, it’s just a short moment of pleasure: writing a book, story, short stories or some other literary work .

Mostly graphomaniacs are people of creative professions, more often - people in the humanities. Scientists, journalists, writers, artists. They can't get past