Chucking TV Helped me Start my Company(joshwhiton.com) |
Chucking TV Helped me Start my Company(joshwhiton.com) |
If anything occupies a lot of your time, of course eliminating it will free up time for other things.
I'm not immune either, I have been trying to cut down on TV but I still watch maybe four or five hours per week.
Even if you think all those other forms of entertainment are "bad", I'd still ask what's so wrong about being "unproductive" some of the time? I don't think you should seek to be 100% "productive". I think being a cultured person is a perfectly good goal as well.
The great thing about TV, unlike playing the guitar, is that you can do other things while watching TV. I can workout, write code, write docs, read HN, write blog entries, write emails, clean the house, cook dinner, put up crown molding, etc... And frankly, I enjoy watching TV more than playing a guitar.
More TV please.
And besides, sitting in front of the TV at least feels like wasting time, and yet here I am on the internet while sitting at my work desk in front of my work computer looking like I'm working!
Like pontificating on Hacker News from a pulpit built of gross generalization? Not everyone who watches TV wastes frightening amounts of time on it. I watch relatively little, almost all of it ends up educating me in some way, and that which does not gives some highly desired chances to shrug off stress and laugh a little.
He could have replaced guitar with model airplane building, riding bikes, making friendship bracelets, or training a giraffe.
The point is, good time management makes time for the things you need to make time for - and in this person's case, TV happened to be his vice.
I hate the "agree" posts, but since no one else can see how upvoted I can only dream you've been, I decided this comment was worth the -4.
I'm looking at YOU HackerNews :-)
(there's a really funny irony to this statement)
The other thing is that when someone stops (say) watching TV and it turns out not to make much difference to their life, we probably won't hear about that either.
Sampling bias is a powerful thing.
I stopped watching TV and most films from 2007 onwards… until Netflix finally came to Canada and I gorged on it like an all-you-can eat buffet for a month or two. I couldn’t believe I missed stuff like Mad Men and Slumdog Millionaire and started to kick myself for not having seen them sooner.
But really, I watched those a few years after their release, and they’re still just as great as when they first came out. I may have missed a few water cooler talks about Don Draper’s relationships with his secretaries, but who cares. And while many documentaries I’ve seen during the binge were eye-opening, I didn’t lose big by not being able think critically or apply what I’ve seen immediately after.
TV is a fine way to soak up a leisure hour when you don't particularly feel like doing anything else. If you're alert, do something creative. If you're energetic, go do some exercise. But if you're dog tired for two hours before bedtime, then by all means go watch some damn TV.
My big time sink is reading: I read about 3 technical books a month and about 2 novels. For a mindless vegging-out activity, I like hiking.
To this day, TV just absorbs me, I just can't stop watching. I become the caricature of an absent minded drooling zombie. When people speak to me while watching TV I don't respond. When I go to a bar that has any channel on, I zone out of social life.
Though I developed what some people might call "good habits" (I picked up cooking and reading as a kid). But I also think TV is culture in it's own merit, in the sense that it's a shared experience. I've seen a lot of people talk about TV shows with great passion, and I'm totally lost on that experience.
In the end TV is just a medium, and you choose what to watch. It is true that the quality of most TV shows is appalling (and yet I can't stop looking), but I've found that if I turn it on specifically to watch a show, instead tuning out, I can have a healthy relationship with it.
Same here. Having grown up without much TV, I find it absolutely hypnotic when it's on, which is why keeping it off is critical to my productivity.
My not owning a TV isn't some form of elitism; I don't keep a TV in the house for the same reason a recovering alcoholic doesn't keep liquor in the house - I can't trust myself with it 24/7.
My question is - how do you maintain this discipline in the age of internet video on demand? As PG put it in his essay on distraction, I often feel like sometime in the last few years someone snuck in and put a TV on my desk.
I work from home much of the time, and that requires a fast, always-on internet connection. I've been reasonably successful at keeping my bad habits in check to date, but the temptation alone is a regular distraction.
I'd be very interested to hear how others deal with this.
without tv, i find i get antsy or distracted. if i put on music, i spend more time air drumming and rocking out than typing.
Not that I don't like heavy music, but as you say, it doesn't really work as something to have on in the background.
I find it 100% impossible to work with Music on. I just can't handle it.
Every 3 minutes there is a completely different sound playing.
Each song has a completely different story.
Each song triggers an entirely different set of emotions.
Every 6 to 10 minutes I have to stop and start skipping through tracks to find something suitable for the moment.
If I just play the same band over and over, I find it leads to a trance like state, or I feel like I'm being punished and forced to listen to the same music.
Then there's the music I would have to play in order to stay focused, say instrumental music only, and in this case I get frustrated. Tired of the loop, of the sound, it turns into a "tick" instead of a sound.
Anyway, I have a real hate-hate relationship with listening to music while I work. Very few people are with me on this.
I prefer to turn on white-noise TV just so there's ambiance in the room that has no rhythm :)
tv while i work is still my preference and keeps me the most productive. it's like the ADD portion of my brain is satiated by the flickering lights and let's the rest of my brain focus on the task at hand.
My productivity is huge with this set up but I still get to watch my favourites.
I completely agree with Josh though. In my case, I haven't watched more than 30 minutes of TV (usually zero) in a week for probably 10 years now. Instead, during the evenings I worked on my business while my spouse watched TV. Now I have a great business to show for all those hours. Don't have anything to show for the TV-watching hours from the previous 10 years though. YMMV (though you'll never know 'til you try it!)
The fact is, I do have a small (wait, 32" is small now?) one in the bedroom, but it's hooked up to AppleTV and Roku, for the sole purpose of putting on podcasts and informational videos (like TED Talks or Khan Academy) to fall asleep to.
I can relate. But I've learnt to teach myself that TV is like a drug. It can be very relaxing to "turn your mind off" and "zone out" to TV. Sometimes you have had a long day and feel like you "need" some TV to help relax.
The truth is that TV is harmful. It is lazy, bad for your health, unproductive and a massive time waste.
What is scary is that you can watch 5 shows in a night and then the next day not remember any of the shows. That is why people watch reruns of TV shows - their mind is basically off the whole time so they can watch the same thing over and over.
*(TV is fine and healthy in moderation.)
Actually it's taken many bursts of willpower for my family to stay TV free. People keep pushing them on us as soon as they find out we don't have one. My brother in law sent us one for christmas one year despite being told we didn't want one. We gave it away. And it seems like every scond person has an old they want us to have because "you can't not have a TV!"
http://www.randsinrepose.com/archives/2010/06/22/chill.html
(Not that I've tried that technique. Can't find the time with so many things on TV & HN. ;).)
http://www.theonion.com/articles/area-man-constantly-mention...
Basically, stop blaming TV. TV isn't what's not getting the work done.
I still have a TV in my living room, tho. Once a day I watch the news.
I live right across the road from a store and yet if there is no food in the house I won't feel inclined to go and buy more unless it's time for a meal. Then I buy exactly enough stuff to make one meal only with no difficulty restraining myself.
Result: I exercise a form of will power I do have and achieve my goal rather than failing to exercise a form of willpower I don't have.
Am I just fooling myself? Yeah. Maybe this guy is too. But if the outcome is positive then that seems smart to me.
I was a coke addict, sure it was my own fault for getting into it, for enabling my own unhealthy habit. But it wasn't enough just to "stop blowing coke." I had to sever relationships with bad influences, I had to "throw coke out the window."
With that in mind, I'm going to of chuck my TV out the window, and despite what you might argue, I'm not just lying to myself. I'm improving my life.
You can always make an active choice as to whether you'll be producing or consuming. With TV, you're guaranteed to be consuming.
There is nothing wrong with consuming. Sometimes your brain is fried, and you need to mentally recharge. However if you have the ability to produce, and you are not choosing to produce, you will fail.
For some, removing the consumption device makes it easier to produce since the choice the consume is no longer an option.
I can't think of a potential upside that you expose yourself to by watching TV (other than the immediate gratification), but maybe there is something.
> Each song has a completely different story.
> Each song triggers an entirely different set of emotions.
> Every 6 to 10 minutes I have to stop and start skipping through tracks to find something suitable for the moment.
None of the above issues relate to Chuck Wild's Liquid Mind albums, which is the only music I listen to.
No, I've learned a lot through it.
> I'd still ask what's so wrong about being "unproductive" some of the time?
Nothing. But TV tends to make me unproductive for more of the time than I want.
edit: And I never just watch TV anyway, I'm always doing something else, like coding or reading HN or looking at code on GitHub.
I do have self-control, at least regarding TV. That's why I don't watch it at all. (I do have a television, it is gathering dust in a cupboard.)
> If I spend 45 minutes watching TV or 45 minutes playing with myself, what's the difference?
It is quite easy -- and millions of people do it -- to spend an entire evening watching TV. I dunno about you, but I have never spent 5 hours non-stop masturbating :-). So the one activity is self-limiting, but the other isn't.