In the fall of 2000, when I was taking a yoga class, the teacher said
something that made me sit up (when I wasn’t supposed to) and had me wondering.
In regard to a yoga pose that involved a severe flexing of the knee, she admitted
that she had “knee issues.” To the best of my knowledge, that was the first
time I heard the term “issues” used in this way.
To my ears—and so to my understanding of the term—the use of “issues” as
a substitute for “problems” is very nearly preposterous. In what way is the
word “problem” pejorative? Do we need an anodyne way of expressing the
idea of anxiety and pain as something other than . . . anxiety and pain?
Toward the end of the entry “issue” in the Oxford English Dictionary, there is this:
Draft additions June 2003
In pl. orig. and chiefly U.S. Emotional or psychological
difficulties (freq. with modifying word); points of emotional conflict.
1982 N.Y. Times 8 Dec. c10/6 The more
difficult aspect can come after alcohol is removed. Then it becomes how do you
deal with the emotions and intimacy issues that were largely dealt with
previously through alcohol?
1991 Longevity Jan. 70/1 At the root of
anniversary syndrome are unresolved issues about the loved
one stemming from the past.
1998 Community Care 20 Aug. 46/5 (advt.) Educational
programme and 24-hour placement support for emotionally damaged children and
young people. Reparative work with attachment issues.
In the American
Heritage Dictionary, there is toward the end of the entry “issue” this:
5. Informal A personal
problem or emotional disorder: The
teacher discussed the child's issues with his parents.
In Merriam-Webster’s 11th
Collegiate Dictionary, we find this at definition 6:
(2) : CONCERN, PROBLEM
*I have issues with his behavior*
Note that these are all marginal definitions in the most authoritative dictionaries we have. I would bet
that most people who talk about “issues” think they are being bluntly
sincere. So now just why has it become the vogue way of saying you have a problem to say you have an “issue”? I'd welcome comments. Do you have a problem with my saying that "issue" is being used as a strangely namby-pamby veil for what is really meant?
Every entry in this blog will end with an illustration, whether or not it's illustrative. Joseph Beuys didn't have problems with tossing whatever into his box of detritus (he definitely wouldn't have thought of it as an issue):

This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete