This is Simon White, who is selling his Tardis for a novel reason:
Dr Who and his materialistic obsession with it represents the "greatest lie that Satan ever told" according to Mr White.
...
"I had to retire early from my job as a nurse at the Royal United Hospital in Bath in 1998 because I was suffering from bipolar disorder.
"I turned to drink and became an alcoholic and the Dr Who obsession was the only thing that kept me going. I wouldn't have given it up if you'd have put a gun to my head."
Having discovered Christianity Mr Smith has renounced his old life and is putting the whole collection up for sale in local trade magazines and on eBay.
He said: "God delivered me from the evil that is Dr Who, materialism and alcoholism.
One man's conversion on the road to Damascus (or Gallifrey?) is another man's gain, as I'm sure there are plenty of Doctor Who fans that would be happy to give the Tardis a happy home.
Link
For this guy's beliefs, I'm not sure he has it right.
"the Dr Who obsession was the only thing that kept me going. I wouldn’t have given it up if you’d have put a gun to my head.”
Sounds to me that Dr. Who kept him out of a scary pit of dispair. He should be more greatful.
Now, if it had been the other way around, and he had been obsessed with God and now he's obsessed with Dr. Who, I don't think you'd see many of the folks on here telling him to be grateful for his former obsession. Well, maybe the Christians would (but I suspect they'd be telling him about his impending stint in hell for abandoning his belief in God).
For me it was Ninja Turtles to Mighty Max to Legos to Transformers to Pokemon to Magic to Warhammer to Super Smash Brothers, Sneakers, and Magic again.
(i'm joking, don't get all up in arms/lightsabers/curses.)
and I already have my own TARDIS prop, thank you very much.
This poor bugger just wants people in his life who will tell him what to do and that they're right and everyone else will rot in hell.
He's trading one obsession for another.
Mine's the lonelier path, but at least I get to think for myself.
I, in fact, WOULD tell him to be grateful for his former obsession if the roles were reversed. Anything that would keep a person from self destruction is good, even if it is an obsession. (well, as long as it wasn't self- or other- destuctive as well, such as alcohol/drug use, or serial killing or something.)
It might not be ideal, but living with an obsession is better than sinking into depression - or worse.
Sad that we assume he's "trading obsessions" simply because he got religion. Perhaps his religion helped him to realize his unhealthy, costly obsession with Dr Who, and he decided to give it up. It doesn't necessarily mean he's filling up his house with Mary statues and tiny bottles of holy water.
It is a material world, and we all obsess over something. Harry Potter is kinda yesterday - maybe you should give Dr Who a try, Brit.
Kind of like addicts that trade booze/drugs for caffeine/sugar/nicotine (if you doubt that, just go to any AA or NA meeting and watch the endless chain smoking, coffee drinking, donut munching going on - not to mention all that "higher power" crap).
Personally, I'm tempted to start RA (religion anonymous) and make a fortune showing people how to separate myth from reality.