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Turn Off & Tune In
By Sheila Wray Gregoire
Also see:
9 Ways to Reduce Your Family's TV Time
29 Alternatives to the Tube
When Your Spouse Won't Tune Out
Your TV habits affect your marriage … for
better or for worse.
Another Thursday night gone, I
thought, then sighed as I collapsed into bed. My husband, Keith,
came in to the bedroom, wanting to talk, but I brushed him off to be
alone with my melancholy thoughts. Frustrated, Keith huffed out of
the room.
How insensitive! I thought. Just like
last Thursday, and the Thursday before that, and the Thursday …
That's when it hit me. We had this same routine
every Thursday night—not because Keith was insensitive, but because
I was depressed. And the culprit was easy to find:
ER. I loved that show, but boy did it
wreak havoc with my emotions!
A few weeks later I started a new chapter in my
life. For a past soap and Oprah-holic, it was a radical departure. I
stopped watching television. And in so doing, I discovered my life,
my husband, and my family, perhaps for the first time. I started
playing with my kids, finding new hobbies, making new friends, and
nurturing my marriage. And my conversations became deeper than,
"Move, you're in the way."
April 21-27 has been designated TV-Turnoff Week,
when around the country families will turn off the television, pull
out the Monopoly games and the inline skates, and enjoy being with
each other. If you've had the nagging feeling that the TV is on in
your house far more than it needs to be, here's your chance to
experience what it would be like to live without it. Here's what
you're likely to find:
TV steals our time
I learned long ago that gravity is heaviest on the couch that's
right in front of the TV. Once you start watching, it's so hard to
get up. Nielsen Media Research reports that the average American
watches four hours of television of day. That equals five full days
a month, two months a year, and almost 11 years by the time you
reach 65.
Janice feels her husband is well on his way to
that 11 years. When Tom comes home from work, he immediately flicks
on the TV, yet never manages to flick it back off. For Janice, who
always dreamed of a TV-free home, Tom's viewing habits came as a
shock.
"We hardly talk! He doesn't even want to eat
dinner together," she reports. "He'll take his food and eat it in
front of the television. I know Tom loves me, but we have no time to
build our relationship." In the early days of their marriage, Janice
tried to convince him to tune out, but these discussions usually
progressed to fights. While she's now realized she can't change him,
she still longs for the intimacy she believes they're missing.
Another couple, Brenda and Jack, have only
recently found that intimacy. For them, watching TV allowed them to
spend the entire evening together without ever having to discuss
anything touchy. It was the perfect tool for avoidance. As their
marriage deteriorated, Brenda and Jack realized they needed to make
a radical break. Though they recoiled at the thought of not watching
TV, which to them meant losing their security blanket, their initial
dread soon turned to joy as they discovered the richness their
newfound friendship could bring. Instead of watching other people
have relationships, they finally have one themselves.
TV invades our minds
While watching television certainly hinders our efforts to build
relationships, its effects don't stop there. It can even start to
affect our attitudes. While ER woke me
up to the effects television was having on my mood, the final straw
came one night when my husband and I were watching
Friends. Here was a show about people
our age who were substituting sex for commitment and ruining their
lives in the process. Yet instead of being shocked or saddened, we
were laughing! Slowly, insidiously, the world's values were
affecting ours. Something had to change.
The words of Philippians
4:8 kept running through my mind: "Whatever is true, whatever
is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely,
whatever is admirable … think about such things." The Christian life
is a battle for the mind—and when the TV was on, it was a battle I
all too often lost. Advertisers spend $40 billion a year because
they believe they can influence our buying decisions. If TV can make
us buy a certain brand of toothpaste, can't it also loosen our
convictions about sin?
Perhaps TV's influence is most dangerous in the
area of sexual fantasy. When pictures get into our head, they're
extraordinarily difficult to extricate. Men, who tend to be visually
stimulated, fall particularly prey to this problem. Image after
image show women with perfect bodies, often in various states of
undress. Instead of "delighting in the wife of your youth," as
Solomon exhorts us in Proverbs 5:18,
a man may wish his wife better resembled Jennifer Aniston!
TV affects our expectations
Not only can TV affect our fantasy life, it can also affect our
expectations about our spouse. In 1999, The National Fatherhood
Initiative announced that "few fathers are to be found on prime time
television, and those that are usually are portrayed as incompetent
or detached." The typical TV father resembles Homer Simpson, a jolly
buffoon who may mean well, but who constantly requires his wife and
kids to bail him out of scrapes. Watching the way fathers are
depicted on TV can make us more inclined to look for the negative in
our own husbands.
Other shows highlight our husbands' inadequacies
by going to the opposite extreme: men on soap operas constantly
bring flowers and chocolates while they hang on to their beloved's
every word. Brenda found that she often lived vicariously through
these soap opera women, wishing her own husband would be that
romantic. When she gave up TV, though, she discovered to her
surprise that Jack's previously annoying habits had stopped
bothering her. She stopped waiting for him to live up to an
impossible ideal, and enjoyed him for who he was.
TV's depiction of women can be equally harmful to
our relationships. Women on TV rarely concern themselves with the
mundane things that take up so much of our time, such as cleaning,
laundry, or errands. Instead, TV women are energetic and competent,
juggling everything without getting a hair out of place. None of
this tires them out, either, for at night they tend to be eager
sexual partners, regardless of the state of the relationship. Men
watching this are liable to find their own wives inexplicably
unaffectionate and petty in comparison.
It's these unrealistic expectations that worry
Denise MacDonald, a marriage and family therapist from Ontario. "If
you get your information about relationships from TV, you're going
to think there's something inadequate about yours," she says. Since
such subjects are rarely discussed honestly among friends, the only
window many of us have into how "everyone else" handles relationship
and sexual issues is TV. What a disappointment when our spouses
don't live up to this elusive "norm."
Reducing our TV time is a worthwhile endeavor in
so many ways, but it's certainly not easy to do. Tonight at Brenda
and Jack's house, though, the TV will be off while the family plays
a game, goes for a walk, or just talks. Meanwhile, Janice prays for
such a transformation in her home. For some families, that
transformation can begin by taking the small step of turning off for
just one week. We might be pleasantly surprised by the changes we'd
find if we switched off, looked around us, and started enjoying our
spouses and families again.
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