brett559
New member
I hope this doesn't offend anyone, but I wonder if this hobby attracts those with some OCD tendencies. I realize that OCD is a wide-ranging thing, ranging from slight (I like to put my keys here when I get home to work) to crippling.
I know for me, my tank scratches that OCD itch a little. I have a busy life (wife, job, 4 kids (soon to be 5)), my house is usually a mess (sometimes a few hours after we clean it), etc. I like things orderly and in control, and most of life is by definition un-orderly and (somewhat) out of control. But the little box of water I look at it is TOTALLY within my control. It's a closed system, the only changes that occur are changes that I make (adding this much food, adding this fish, moving this coral, trying this additive, etc.).
And that may be why when something is NOT right (a little algae or cyano) it can drive us crazy. I can't be the only one who's been caught with his hands in the tank when I should be doing something else.
Think of the time and effort (AND MONEY!) we pour into our tanks. That drive has to be more than just "look at the pretty fish!" Also, think of how many people tear down a tank, and a few months later either (1) have a new tank up and running (me and several people I know) or (2) constantly wish they could start a new one (many other people I know). It seems like very few people who really dive into this hobby ever really get it out their system. People come back, sometimes decades later. They just miss it! I think they miss that one thing that is completely and totally within their control.
I think the same principal applies to those reefers who have three, four, five tanks at once. The thrill from setting up that perfect system is too hard to resist. When one tank is "complete", they start another one.
Does any of this ring true to anyone else? A friend confided in me that his reefing hobby was a godsend for his OCD - again something that he could control.
Sort of a heavy, ethereal topic for a fish forum. And of course some people do this hobby for their kids, or because they are DIYers, or because of the challenge. But I wager that most reefers do it (maybe even subconsciously) because it is an outlet for that need (call it OCD or whatever) to have something in their life that is completely and totally within their control.
I'm done now.
I know for me, my tank scratches that OCD itch a little. I have a busy life (wife, job, 4 kids (soon to be 5)), my house is usually a mess (sometimes a few hours after we clean it), etc. I like things orderly and in control, and most of life is by definition un-orderly and (somewhat) out of control. But the little box of water I look at it is TOTALLY within my control. It's a closed system, the only changes that occur are changes that I make (adding this much food, adding this fish, moving this coral, trying this additive, etc.).
And that may be why when something is NOT right (a little algae or cyano) it can drive us crazy. I can't be the only one who's been caught with his hands in the tank when I should be doing something else.
Think of the time and effort (AND MONEY!) we pour into our tanks. That drive has to be more than just "look at the pretty fish!" Also, think of how many people tear down a tank, and a few months later either (1) have a new tank up and running (me and several people I know) or (2) constantly wish they could start a new one (many other people I know). It seems like very few people who really dive into this hobby ever really get it out their system. People come back, sometimes decades later. They just miss it! I think they miss that one thing that is completely and totally within their control.
I think the same principal applies to those reefers who have three, four, five tanks at once. The thrill from setting up that perfect system is too hard to resist. When one tank is "complete", they start another one.
Does any of this ring true to anyone else? A friend confided in me that his reefing hobby was a godsend for his OCD - again something that he could control.
Sort of a heavy, ethereal topic for a fish forum. And of course some people do this hobby for their kids, or because they are DIYers, or because of the challenge. But I wager that most reefers do it (maybe even subconsciously) because it is an outlet for that need (call it OCD or whatever) to have something in their life that is completely and totally within their control.
I'm done now.