Text Only
Search

Losing It: It's Hard When You Lose Control

10 November 2007
MP3 - Download Audio audio clip
Listen to MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

I'm Susan Clark with the Special English program, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

Tom Smith is the best hitter on his company's baseball team. For weeks during the playing season, Tom hit a home run in every game the team played. But then suddenly he stopped hitting home runs. He could not hit the baseball at all.

One day he struck out three times in one game. He said, "I am afraid I am losing it."

Mary Jones bought a dress in a woman's clothing store. She felt very happy about buying the dress until she got home. Then she remembered she had left her credit card at the store when she used it to pay for the dress. It was the third time that month that Mary had forgotten something important.

Mary was angry with herself. She said, "Am I losing it?"

Emma Cleveland was teaching a class in mathematics at a college. She began to explain to the students how to solve a very difficult problem. She undersood it very well. But somehow, at that moment, she could not explain it. Emma said, "I must be losing it."

Americans seem to have a lot of concern about losing it. At least that is what you would think from hearing them talk. They use the expression when they feel they are losing control. It can mean losing emotional control. Or losing the ability to do something. Or losing mental powers.

Word experts differ about how the expression started. Some believe it came from television programs popular in the nineteen eighties. Others believe it began with psychologists and psychiatrists who deal with how people think, feel and act.

One psychologist said, "We Americans have many concerns about controlling our lives. Perhaps we worry too much."

She continued, "In many situations, to say you are losing it eases the tension. It is healthy. And most people who say they are having a problem are not losing it." People may feel more like they are losing it when they are "down in the dumps."

People who are down in the dumps are sad. They are depressed.

Word expert Charles Funk says people have been feeling down in the dumps for more than four-hundred years. Sir Thomas More used the expression in fifteen thirty-four. He wrote, "Our poor family ... has fallen in such dumps."

Word experts do not agree what the word dumps means. One expert, John Ayto, says the word dumps probably comes from the Scandanavian countries. The languages of Denmark and Norway both have similar words. The words mean to fall suddenly.

Americans borrowed this saying. And, over the years, it has become a popular way of expressing sadness.

(MUSIC)

This WORDS AND THEIR STORIES program was written by Jeri Watson. I'm Susan Clark.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Featured Story
Adding Up the Many Dangers of Tobacco -- and Finding New Ones  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Australia Aims for Cleaner Coal  Audio Clip Available
Looking for Energy in Algae  Audio Clip Available
Kennedy Center Honors Six Artists for Life's Work  Audio Clip Available
Henry Loomis, 1919-2008: Director of VOA Had Idea to Create Special English  Audio Clip Available
Similarities, but Also Big Differences, Between Today's Crisis and 1930s  Audio Clip Available
Obama Chooses Economic Team for 'Historic' Crisis  Audio Clip Available
More and More Americans Bike Their Way to Work  Audio Clip Available
US History: As Jackson Aims to Shut Bank, an Economic Crisis Results  Audio Clip Available
Foreign Student Series: Thanksgiving in the US  Audio Clip Available
Four More People Who Are Making a Difference  Audio Clip Available
Feeling No Pain: The World of Anesthesia  Audio Clip Available
Neurologist Oliver Sacks Writes About Patients With Unusual Conditions  Audio Clip Available
Vertical Farming: Potatoes? They're on the Fifth Floor  Audio Clip Available