Why this word is great
GRAPHORRHEA — [Noun] A pathological symptom of mental disorder, most notably schizophrenia, characterized by a compulsive, excessive, and often incoherent outpouring of written text. From the Greek grapho- (from graphein, "to write") combined with -rrhea (from rhoia, "flow, flux"). Unlike hypergraphia, which denotes a neurologically-rooted compulsion to write where meaning may yet persist, or logorrhea, which concerns a torrent of speech, graphorrhea is the silent, private pathology of the page. It is a hand moving ceaselessly across a ream of paper, filling margins with cryptic symbols; the frantic pen wearing through the paper to create a dense, impenetrable thicket of ink; the desperate, fifty-page manifesto mailed to a stranger, its logic dissolving like sugar in water. It is not communication, but its ghost—the tragic proof that to write is sometimes to be irretrievably lost within the labyrinth of one’s own mind.