tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109269.post-74022828470430322812008-06-14T05:06:00.004-05:002008-06-14T05:14:36.034-05:00The Magazines in Doctors’ OfficesSteve Sorensen <br /><em>(Originally published in the Warren Times Observer, June 14, 2008.)</em> </p><blockquote><strong><span style="color: rgb(0, 102, 0);font-size:200;" ><center><span style="font-size:120%;"> “I expected to see a big whitetail <br />or an elk head hanging in here,” I said. </span> </center></span></strong></blockquote> </p> I’ve been in lots of doctors’ offices lately, and I can’t figure out why waiting rooms are not equipped with better reading material. Think about it. You open the door and cast your glazed eyes about for something to read. <br /><br />You know the routine. The first magazine you focus on is a copy of an entertainment magazine – probably <span style="font-style:italic;">People</span>, at least three months old. Of course, it doesn’t really matter that it’s three months old, because it’s only about the fluff of celebrity lifestyles – nothing that ever changes and nothing that’s important. It’s so tiresome, but it’s all presented as if it were totally new and vitally important. <br /><br />I was headed for a doctor’s waiting room in Pittsburgh recently – expecting to sift through <span style="font-style:italic;">People</span>, <span style="font-style:italic;">Woman’s Day</span>, <span style="font-style:italic;">Redbook</span>, <span style="font-style:italic;">Cosmo</span> and all the rest, to find something interesting among the various fashion, food and fun magazines. Instead, what I saw was completely unexpected.<br /><br />Right on top of a pile was a magazine featuring a cover photo of a black bear. It was <span style="font-style:italic;">North American Hunter</span>, the magazine of the North American Hunting Club. Common sense whispered to me, “That’s probably a stray that will be tossed if I don’t rescue it.” I quickly grabbed it. It might be the only magazine worth reading during a long wait! <br /><br />Under it was another surprise. <span style="font-style:italic;">American Rifleman</span>. Yikes! Not just a pro-gun, pro-hunting magazine, but the actual “official organ” of the National Rifle Association! <br /><br />The strangest thing? This doctor’s office treats women – women only – and here are a couple of “politically incorrect” magazines that appeal primarily to men – in a city, in a health care office, connected to a university hospital. Not a place you’d expect to be friendly to what some people call the “blood sports.” <br /><br />“One of those dastardly right wingers must be dropping off magazines here. Good for him!” I thought. <br /><br />There were more. And not just the mainstream outdoor rags like <span style="font-style:italic;">Field & Stream</span> and <span style="font-style:italic;">Outdoor Life</span>, but a lot of magazines that most of the public has never heard of.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Bugle</span>, the bi-monthly of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, was there. And <span style="font-style:italic;">Rifle</span>. And even <span style="font-style:italic;">Handloader</span> magazine. As Ted Nugent might say, “You won’t see those in France!” They come from Wolfe Publishing, a company that caters to hard core riflemen and shooters who make their own ammunition. <br /><br />The newest one from Wolfe’s corral was also there – <span style="font-style:italic;">Successful Hunter</span>. Wolfe targets readers who want accurate information based on solid technical knowledge. If you see anything fluffy in their magazines, it will be in a photograph with a story that includes data about bullet weight and velocity. <br /><br />Sifting through the pile, I also found <span style="font-style:italic;">The Alaska Professional Hunter</span>. And another copy. And another. And another. It’s a quarterly that I’ve seen only in Alaska, and occasionally at sport shows where guides and outfitters are selling Alaska hunts. <br /><br />Several well known magazines turned up, too, including <span style="font-style:italic;">Deer & Deer Hunting</span>, <span style="font-style:italic;">Pennsylvania Game & Fish</span>, and <span style="font-style:italic;">Peterson’s Hunting</span>. And I noticed that the mailing labels were not clipped off or blackened out. My right winger theory was wrong. They had the doctor’s own name on them. <br /><br />He had given me lots to read while passing the time, but too little time passed before I was invited to join my wife and the doctor in the examination room. My reading adventures were over. <br /><br />After a brief medical conversation, the doctor asked me, “Do you have any questions?” <br /><br />“Yeah,” I said. “I expected to see a big whitetail or an elk head hanging in here.” <br /><br />He laughed. “You’re talking about the magazines in the waiting room. I keep telling my staff that it’s not my patients who spend the most time out there. It’s their husbands.” <br /><br />We need a few more doctors who think like he does. I’d like to thank him for standing up for what he believes in by boldly ordering at least a dozen different magazines that appeal to his fellow hunters. <br /><br />Oh yeah – and for taking such good care of my wife.Steve Sorensennoreply@blogger.com0