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Days Two and Three

Stuck at home, sick, with a storm raging outside is exactly the sort of time when I dearly love to lie on the couch, dozing and watching TV, all day long. Not an easy couple of days to resist watching the tube. What I noticed was that rather than stare numbly at the TV, while feeling sorry for myself about being unwell, I simply went to bed and got the rest I needed. As a result, I was still able to be up and about early in the mornings to get some chores done. Later, on both days, I had enough energy to potter about the house doing some undemanding tasks such as sorting and tidying my patchwork fabric stash, which I hadn't visited for a few years, and I dug out and resurrected a knitting project that's been hibernating for a couple of years - I'm now about a third of the way up the back and am enjoying the project. Another long-overdue task I did was to give my email account a thorough clean out. All emails have either been saved to files or deleted. My inbox in now em

Day One

7.45 pm - it's after dinner and I'm hiding in the family room, typing this, while the rest of the family is in the living room enjoying the warmth of the fire and a classic family movie on the television. It sounds like a fun and I feel a little bit lonely. They keep calling the funny bits out to me. My husband loves to relax in front of the set on dark nights. Over the summer months he works in our large (one acre) garden most evenings, but when he's forced indoors, he's happy to just lounge in the lounge - it's his only 'inside' hobby. We live in the country so there's no town to go out to or well-lit streets to walk around. Hmmmm, what to do with the rest of the evening? I've had a bad headache all day so I could go to bed early. There's a bathroom to clean and the kitchen floor to wash. Should I do those? No! I'm going to bed with a book - Charles Dickens'  Bleak House .

An Experiment

I have resolved to quit television for a month - sort of. With the end of daylight saving (southern hemisphere) last weekend, the temptation to spend every evening snuggled up on the couch, in a warm living room, watching all my favourite dramas, documentaries and classic comedies is difficult to resist. I know this because I have fallen down that rabbit hole every winter for nearly thirty years. I'm curious to know what I would do instead if I didn't watch television every evening and have decided that a month would be a fair test to find out if a TV-free life is right for me. I will be allowing a small amount of 'planned' viewing such as allowing an hour a week to watch the remaining episodes of  Broadchurch  and to view occasional 'instructional' videos whenever I need to.