| Published April 22, 1999 by Peninsula Daily News Port Angeles, Washington Copyright 1999 Eric Rush |
| Kicking TV Addiction
|
| He heard me mention that I hadn’t turned on a TV, not even in a hotel, in weeks, and he’d read enough of my columns to know there is no warm place in my heart or mind for television. The growing evidence that TV severely damages mental, moral, and cultural development in young, growing minds concerns him. He has small children. His TV is on all day. The TV is on all day because his wife likes having it on all the time. She does not share her husband’s fears that the relentless video assault on their children’s growing brains might cripple their ability to think clearly and relate normally to other people. He is an airline pilot and is away from home half the time, and he worries. He wonders how he can reduce his family’s exposure to TV without being home every day and without starting a war. It is a subject upon which I am not without ideas and opinions. I asked where in the house the TV is and how big it is. It’s in the main living room, of course, just as it is in most homes. How big is the screen? It’s not one of those monsters that are becoming popular these days, but it’s not small. There are two easy ways to cut down on TV viewing without depriving anyone of what some devoutly defend as “good programs.” I f you’re trying to reduce intake of candy, you don’t leave a dish of it out in plain sight in a room you spend lots of time in. You hide it. You know where it is and you can get at it easily, but it’s not a flag in your face every time you pass by. The first thing to do is get the TV out of the living room, out of the central living and socializing area of the house. Put it in a room that is seldom used. A spare bedroom is ideal. Don’t overdo the isolation. If you put it in a cold, dark corner of the basement, it won’t stay there. The idea is not to make watching TV uncomfortable. All you need to do is make it a wee bit inconvenient. Out of sight, out of mind. O ur TV——yes, there is one in my house——is upstairs in the loft. It’s out of sight behind cabinet doors until someone wants to watch it. It’s not visible from anywhere in the house except the loft. You have to go upstairs, and even then you can’t see the TV at first. You have to walk nearly the length of the loft and look back at it. Our loft is a second living room, not a dark, dusty storage space. It’s a comfortable place to read, sit with a cup of tea and look out the windows at the sunrise. Or watch TV. If the TV were in our main living room, I’d watch it anytime I was in the room and it was on. The only way to avoid it would be to leave that room that is the center of our living area. The second thing to do is trade in the big screen for a small one. Really small, say, six or seven inches maximum. All the information that a big screen displays is on the small screen. You have to sit closer to see it, but it’s all there. Years ago, I had an out-of-town weekend job and I slept Saturday nights on a friend’s couch in his rec room. I’d arrive after midnight, turn on the TV with the sound low, and watch whatever was on for an hour or so while my brain spun down for sleep. One weekend, their color TV was in the shop and they had a very small, black-and-white loaner. I turned it on as usual, and, after a few minutes, realized I hadn’t the slightest idea what I’d been watching. I turned it off and went right to sleep. A TV screen is like a whirlpool. The bigger it is, the harder it sucks. You can walk right past a tiny TV and not even feel its pull, but if a huge glass eye is blinking seductively in the visual center of the living room, it is impossible to ignore. I told the man these things. He’s going to try to talk his wife into giving it a try. I’m eager to learn how it turns out. Stay tuned, if you’ll pardon the expression. Back to Main Page Back to Archives Next Article |
| The Links Below Jump To Pages On Whatever Web You Are In | |||
| Table Of Contents | Search This Web | Navigation Help Page | |
| Write To Karl Loren -- He Pledges To Answer EVERY Personal Message, Personally. Click here or on his name in the box below. | |||
| The Links Below Are To Various Web Sites Published By Karl Loren | |||
| Karl Loren Web | Vibrant Life Web | Karl Loren's Book | |
| Super Colostrum | Bulk MSM | Heart Disease | |
| Emmessar | Happiness | Arthritis | |
| Instead Of | Chelation Therapy | Super Colostrum (2) | |
| Karl Loren's Catalog Store | Central Page For All 12 Webs! | ||
|
I promise to answer your message -- click here to send me a personal message
|
SUBSCRIBE: The Wednesday Letter is a free electronic monthly newsletter written and published by Karl Loren. You can view more than 50 back issues of this publication by clicking here. The Wednesday Letter subscription list is maintained on a secure server, no name is ever given or sold to anyone, and it is never used except for this Newsletter. It is automatically published on the Tuesday night just before the first Wednesday of every month. You can subscribe to this free monthly electronic letter by entering your eMail address and name below. You will then automatically receive a request for confirmation, sent to whatever address you have entered. If you do NOT receive this confirmation request, then you will not be subscribed. There may have been an error with your address and you should resubmit. The letter is never sent twice to the same address -- so you do not have to worry about a duplicate subscription. When you receive this confirmation request you must reply to it, or your subscription will not become active. No one can subscribe your name, and address, without you being notified, and if you get an unwanted notice of subscription you only need to DO NOTHING and the subscription will NOT be active.
REMOVAL: You can remove yourself from the subscription list in several different ways. Click here to read about this entire newsletter system. Every edition of The Wednesday Letter is delivered to your address with YOUR name and address in view on the letter, with a link that allows you to remove THAT name from the subscription list. If you try to send this removal message from an address different from the one you used to send in your original confirmation, then you will get a warning notice first, sent to the subscription address, asking you to confirm that you want to be removed from the list -- by replying to THAT request for confirmation, you will then be automatically removed. Thus, no one else can unsubscribe you, from some other computer, without your knowledge. But, if you send in the unsubscribe notice from the same machine used to receive the Letter, then the removal from the subscription list is automatic.
Personal Message: When you send a personal message to Karl Loren, you will receive a personal reply as per his instructions. Karl pledges that every personal message will get a personal answer. When you provide your mail address, we will send you free information including our free catalog and a cassette tape lecture by Karl Loren about heart disease, no charge, by mail, even if outside the US. You can select particular information you would like to receive, along with the free cassette tape and catalog.