Waiting Room Magazines Are a Conspiracy Against Sanity
Wait for it
I am awed by the sheer insanity of the system.
In a society that congratulates itself on efficiencyâon reducing the interval between desire and gratification to the time it takes to double-tap âapproveâ on your iPhoneâwe have collectively decided that the ideal prelude to minor surgery, medical examination, or a root canal is a 45-minute browse through a laminated copy of last yearâs Vogue magazine.
You walk into one of these hell holesâany medical establishment from a Midtown Manhattan cosmetic surgeon with art on the walls, to a dentist in a strip mall in suburban Ohio â and the receptionist will beam a practiced smile and say,
"The doctor will be with you shortlyâ
Which in medical parlance means anywhere from ten minutes to the death of the universe.
You shrug in resignation and turn around to face a roomful of other hostages, who rapidly look away and pretend they werenât staring with schadenfreude glee at someone further behind them in the waiting line for urgent medical attention.
To not start a war, and preserve the peace in a hallowed hall of medical practice, you turn your attention away from the mocking crowd and to the physical domain of the space you have voluntarily comitted yourself to.
Colorfully painted pastel walls, pressed against them, a narrow bench thatâs almost a sofa, with a 90-degree straight back that seems to be made for a race of tiny people.
You try to settle into a comfortable position on the tight bench in a room full of jittery people, and take your mind away from the horror of it all.
And there they are: the magazines. Laminated journals from a previous era, stacked on a side table, next to an artificial house plant.
- National Geographic, with a cover story on polar bears that predates the iPhone.
- Time pondering the 2008 financial crisis as if it weren't still haunting our retirement savings.
- Cosmopolitan promising "75 Ways to Drive Him Wild" in a room full of anxious strangers who'd rather not make eye contact, let alone contemplate bedroom acrobatics.
So you pick up a dog-eared copy of People magazine from 2018, and stare at Jennifer Aniston's photo and wonder if her eternal youth was just good lighting.
It's insane when you think about it.
This is America in 2026? We have AI writing legal briefs, drones delivering pizza in certain zip codes, and yet, the healthcare systemâthe one industry that literally holds your life in its handsâstill thinks the optimal distraction is a pile of glossy paper from 2019.
Now, one might argueâand oh, how the waiting room apologists doâthat these magazines are there to "distract" us, to ease the tension of impending root canals or proctological probes.
Let's dismantle that fallacy.
The selection is terrible, curated by a sadistic algorithm that ensures relevance to your life is zero.
- If you're a stockbroker with a cavity, you'll get Vogue waxing poetic about dresses at Milan Fashion Week.
- If you're a supermarket cashier fretting over a check-up, it's Golf Digest explaining why your swing is all wrong.
- If you're a teacher with a suspicious mole you need checked, you'll get Yachting World with full page pictures of the Super Yachts of 2019.
It's as if the universe is mocking you: "Not only are you in pain, but here's proof your hobbies are inadequate."
Then you skim a headline, "Is Your Diet Killing You?"
"Oh great," you think, "not only is my molar infected, but apparently my love of chocolate croissants is a slow suicide."
Handing a medical patient a womanâs lifestyle magazine is like handing an airline passenger a compilation of famous airplane crashes mid-flight.
And the germs. Let's not pretend. These magazines are touched by hundreds of hands every monthâhands that have just been in mouths full of plaque, hands that have wiped noses, hands that belong to people who are, by definition, un-well. Here we are, in the age of hand sanitizer stations every three feet, and still expected to share dog-eared copies of Us Weekly like it's 1995 and nobody's heard of viruses.
They do serve one purpose. By the time your appointment arrives, you are so thrilled to get away from the boring, irrelvant and unhygienic magazines, you will walk straight into the surgical room of your chosen medical profession with a smile on your face.
Update â Turning the Page on waiting room magazines
This year, half the magazines at my local clinic have been replaced by pharma pamphlets: "Ask Your Doctor About [New Drug With 47 Side Effects Including Death]."
It started innocently enough. A pamphlet about Invisalign at my dentistâs office. Suddenly, the table has become dominated by titles like:
- âAsk Your Doctor About [Brand Name] for [Condition You Might Have]â
- âLiving Better with [Chronic Illness] â Important Safety Information Insideâ
- âCould [New Drug] Be Right for You? (Side Effects May Include Death, Dismemberment, and Sexual Dysfunction â See Page 3)â
They are printed on the same glossy paper as the magazines they replaced, and feature colorful photos of smiling, healthy, middle-aged people jogging through golden meadows.
They're short, they're colorful, they're full of bullet points and pie charts showing âpatient satisfaction ratesâ that look like stock photos of pie charts. Patients pick them up because there's nothing else left that's even remotely current.
The irony is that they are the only current, up-to-date reading material in the waiting room, and they are marketing the very system that is keeping you waiting.
Welcome to the new waiting room, where even the reading material is trying to upsell you when you're already down.
About the Creator
Scott Christensonđ´
Born and raised in Milwaukee WI, living in Hong Kong. Hoping to share some of my experiences w short story & non-fiction writing. Have a few shortlisted on Reedsy:
https://blog.reedsy.com/creative-writing-prompts/author/scott-christenson/



Comments (2)
Great satire, Scott! There was a lot here that I could relate to. Also, the pharma stuff reminded me of the North American adverts for wonder drugs with their exhaustive list of side effects which would probably make you feel worse than dealing with the condition in the first place that it's meant to alleviate!
This is marvelous. Mining mundane nonsense for amusing gold is your forte.