Grant400 wrote on 07 Nov 2020 23:39:
Gut voch! Just a few quick questions:
Do you rush through certain things so you can watch a movie? Do you plan ahead when you will be able to watch later? Do you spend time that could've been spent having a conversation or hanging out with a friend/family member watching?
Here's the most important: Do you sometimes (being completely honest) feel that you must watch something or finish watching something even when you may have lost interest because its boring or you are really tired or any other reason?
The way I'm understanding it, the crux of the question is: "How much time am I spending watching when I know that I should be doing something else instead?"
Truth be told, I’m having a hard time answering this question because the answer would be: “It depends.” It depends on my mood, energy levels, how busy I am,…
I am not the type of person that will be up at two or later in the morning watching. No, that's not me. Yes I might spend some of my latest wake hour(s) watching, but I know my limits. I try to be in bed between 11-12. It's true that I might tell myself that I'll be in bed at 11 and end up being in bed only at 11 45 just because I was watching something. But I don't think that it's crazy abnormal.
Also when I know that I have something important to do I will do it and try not to get distracted by watching. Yes, I might take unnecessary watching breaks, but I do know that there are times that cannot be interrupted by an episode or movie.
Having said that, I must add that I do feel a strong pull sometimes to watch and just escape reality.
Using the excuse of a ‘light break’, when I am studying at home on my laptop, I will sneak in sometimes a short watching session that I wouldn’t have done otherwise with something like reading a book.
Another thing is that I end up watching almost every day. Sometimes just 20 min. and sometimes it can escalate up to an hour or two (and even three), depending on how much time I have on my hands. I sometimes feel so guilty at the time wasted on these things. Especially when corona first broke out and I was having an ‘extended’ bein hazmanim I was wasting hours upon hours polishing off one season after the other, something I am not very proud of. Baruch Hashem it’s much more controlled now as I have a more normal schedule, but I do think there could be some improvement here. But as I said, I don’t feel ready to just give up watching entirely.
I can attest, though, that as time goes on I am finding it harder to sit down and watch a movie as almost all the content out there is either something I’ve seen before or just ‘eye candy’ in terms of visual effects but empty as a whole. I poshut don’t have patience for this anymore. And even series, that I used to find more attractive than movies, are slowly getting more tedious for me to go through. I realize that at the end of the day it’s all ‘hevel’ and I just need to fully incorporate that idea into my emotional being. But sometimes I just feel that I ‘need’ that escape or that ‘llight break’.
I don’t have a good strategy for this at all. Going cold turkey would be very hard for me. But maybe that’s something I would have to do.
I did actually stop for quite a few years, but when my anxiety came creeping in and I was having an impossible time with learning and even reading, I started watching again. In a way watching was an escape of the pain. On the other hand my anxiety was an excuse to start watching again.
As of now and as I have mentioned before on the forum I’ve had tons of siyata dishmaya and my anxiety is much much lower. So I might consider some form of cutting back in the near future. I would need to find a good substitute though.
I know that even if I do stop, there will be times where I would still crave watching. Truly, it reminds me of the famous story of Rav Gifter who, after having been established as a godol, made a kiddush because he didn’t feel an emotional connection anymore to his favorite sports group. Can you imagine? That means that all the years before that, Rav Gifter, as he was toiling and shteiging and establishing himself as a godol beyisrael, was still somehow connected to his childhood sports team. To me this is a lesson that even when we shteig and grow, we still might feel the emotional connection to this movie or to that series. It doesn’t matter. It’s ok and normal. The ikar is that we continue moving forwards, continue aspiring for greatness. And who knows, maybe one day we will get there.