Negative Effects of Television Tantamount to Emotional Child Abuse in a Box

The negative effects of television and emotional child abuse,
was far from my mind thirty seven years ago, when my jet landed
on the Portuguese Azorean island of Terceira, butsometimes we
have to look to our past to find the truth. What was the world like
before television? What struck me was the fact that not one
home owned a television for the technology had not yet arrived on
the beautiful hydrangea laden isle.

Two other observations amazed me. First, I noticed twelve
and thirteen year old children sitting on their father's
laps, talking and laughing together. Was this because the
negative effects of television multiple causes of child abuse
were not present, in the form of TV ads and shows that make
children desire to grow up fast, so that they don't experience
their childhoods? Was it because both children and parents
had time for each other, due to the fact TV did not exist
on Terceira? Could it have been because both parents and
children felt in better moods because TV wasn't stimulating
their anxiety and aggression, amounting to emotional child abuse
when experienced excessively?

Second, I noticed that many families socialized by visiting
one another's homes in the evening for conversation. I
discovered people were relaxed and easy to converse with.
There was a warm feeling between people, even strangers,
that I hadn't experienced back home. Was the lack of
the negative effects of television responsible for this
comfortable atmosphere? Surely with the arrival of TV in
the Azores, many people would remain home.

When I returned to the United States, I felt eager to
inform my father and uncle about what I'd seen in the
Azores. I tried to talk to my uncle, but he silenced me,
with a wave of his hand, as his favorite football team
began their final scoring drive. Hours later when I
departed, he remarked, "Leaving already?"-as if I'd just
arrived. He hadn't even realized I wanted to talk with him!

Trying to discuss my trip with my father yielded pretty
much the same results. With the TV blaring away, it proved
almost impossible to carry on a discussion. This is how it
had been much of my childhood with my dad and me. It
wasn't viewed as one of the causes of child abuse back
then, but I sure felt second rate compared to the TV.

In fact, the TV so dominated my household that I found
myself spending more time at the neighbor's house as a
child. Years later, when I returned home from college, it
was my neighbors I looked forward to seeing, particularly
since dad still sat before that blaring TV set.

I'll never forget how my neighbors gave me one of the
greatest complements of my childhood: They actually
turned the TV off, and talked to me when I visited them!
I've never forgotten that. Today the memory still brings
tears to my eyes. They never knew just how much that
meant to me: the simple act of turning off the TV and
speaking to me, a twelve year old, who wasn't even their
kid at that. I'd become aware of the negative effects of
television at an early age.

Child abuse is defined as the emotional, physical or sexual
neglect or maltreatment by others that can cause serious
emotional, physical, cognitive or mental disorders. I am
maintaining the negative effects of television on children are
tantamount to child abuse, as defined herein. Furthermore,
I am maintaining that childabuse, whether it be physical,
sexual, or otherwise; always contains an emotional child abuse
component.

When discussing causes of child abuse, I am referring to
the TV as the abuser. While not a person, the TV is both the
device conveying the information, which causes the negative
effects of television on children, and the symbol of the
corporate person, that is to say, those who are involved in
creating what emanates from the TV.

The "Sourcebook For Teaching Science," by Norman Herr,
Ph.D., is a veritable trove of information relating to the
negative effects of television on kids. Let's ask ourselves
some questions about TV and then, where applicable, discuss
the results in terms of causes of child abuse. Utilizing Dr.
Herr's information about children and TV, here are some
questions.


  1. How many minutes per week do parents spend in
    meaningful conversation with their kids? Answer: 3.5
    minutes per week.

    Coldness is a category of emotional child abuse where the
    parent is not emotionally present for his or her child.
    Television could be indicted for contributing to coldness
    since about 40% of people's free time is spent watching
    TV. What's more, it contributes to other types of child
    abuse like isolation, rejection and ignoring that occur
    with so little meaningful interaction between parent and
    child.

    Hence, TV aids and abets emotional child abuse.

  2. What is the percentage of 4-6 year olds that would
    rather spend their time watching TV than with their dad?
    Answer: 54%

    If we parents don't spend meaningful time with our kids,
    they are more likely to feel closer to the TV set than
    us. When our child is more bonded to the TV than he or she
    is to us, that's an indication of emotional child abuse,
    again associated with TV and its multiple causes of child
    abuse.

  3. The average youth spends 900 hours in school each
    year. How many hours of TV do they watch each year?
    Answer: 1500 hours.

    This could be construed as emotional child abuse due to
    seduction and addiction. TV is an addiction for it is
    replacing healthy play, school learning, being with
    friends and, in general, having a life. TV, again, is a
    contributing factor to all these causes of child abuse.

  4. What is the percentage of Americans that regularly
    watch TV during dinner? Answer: 66%.

    Dinnertime gives parents a chance to find out what the kids
    have been doing, and how they've been doing through
    conversation. It's an opportunity for positive conversation.
    This can't happen when everyone is watching TV; otherwise,
    kids and parents could stay in touch on a daily basis.
    Parents could check that kids are doing what they are
    supposed to be doing and helping them to do so, if they
    weren't. Parents could praise their kids for what they
    did correctly. Parents could joke and enjoy their children
    at the dinnertime meal.

    Television divorces parents from their children by seducing
    and distracting them from what is important in their
    lives: each other. Dinner is the time where meaningful
    conversation could blossom, but for the TV set. Add
    seduction and distraction as TV created causes of child
    abuse- another of the many negative effects of television.

  5. Guess the number of murders a child sees a year before
    leaving grade school and then by 18 years of age? Answer:
    8,000 and 200,000!

    By exposing children to thousands of murders every year
    that create anxiety and aggressivity, TV is directly
    contributing to emotional causes of child abuse.
    Remembering that children are much more suggestible,
    imitative, and impulsive than adults, how much mental
    damage is this creating, damage that might manifest in
    their teens, when kids are biologically wired to become
    even more impulsive? Is this why childhood suicides are up
    300% since 1950?

  6. Guess the number of junk food ads seen in 4 hours of
    cartoons on a typical Saturday morning and the number of
    ads children see in a year? Answers: 200 & 20,000!

    Think about how these junk food ads are contributing to
    obesity, our children's morals and values, unhealthy
    thinking and eating habits. How might it affect them later
    in life? In other words, what do you think the long term
    negative effects of television are?

  7. What is the percentage of parents who say they would
    like to limit their children's TV watching? Answer: 73%


Many parents know the negative effects of television on their
children. Then why don't they turn the TV off? There are many
reasons. One reason is that with both parents working all day,
the children are not under their control. A second reason
is that some parents may be too run down to do the
parenting job they think they should be doing. Third,
single parent families first priority is survival. Some
are barely surviving and just don't have anything left
to limit the negative effects of television on their children.

Perhaps, if some of these parents had just a little help, they
would be able to limit these TV stimulated causes of child
abuse and neutralize these negative effects of television.


Dr. Norman Herr's article goes on to say:


"Millions of Americans are so hooked on television that
they fit the criteria for substance abuse as defined in
the official psychiatric manual, according to Rutgers
University psychologist and TV-Free America board member
Robert Kubey. Heavy TV viewers exhibit five dependency
symptoms--two more than necessary to arrive at a clinical
diagnosis of substance abuse. These include:

1) using TV as a sedative;
2) indiscriminate viewing;
3) feeling loss of control while viewing;
4) feeling angry with oneself for watching too much;
5) inability to stop watching; and
6) feeling miserable when kept from watching.

Hence, the negative effects of television on our children, in many
cases, is the same as substance abuse.

Violence and addiction are not the only TV-related health
problems. A National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey released in October 1995 found 4.7 million children
between the ages of 6-17 (11% of this age group) to be
severely overweight, more than twice the rate during the
1960's. The main culprits: inactivity (these same children
average more than 22 hours of television-viewing a week)
and a high-calorie diet.


According to William H. Deitz, pediatrician and prominent
obesity expert at Tufts University School of Medicine, "The
easiest way to reduce inactivity is to turn off the TV set.
Almost anything else uses more energy than watching TV.""

The youth suicide rate has increased about 300% since
1950. This coincides with the increase in TV watching.
Psychiatrist Milton Hershey, of the Penn State Medical
Center, has found that teen suicide rates the past 40 years
have matched the explosive rise of television. Could this
be due to the negative effects of television generated
multiple causes of child abuse?

Researchers, also, discovered that the suicide-TV link was
stronger than the association of suicide with other factors
like alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, or total drug use.

Isn't it incredible that the negative effects of television are more
closely associated with teen suicide than drug or alcohol use!

What is it about TV that causes it's high association with
suicide? Television is isolating, it stimulates one to
experience anxious and aggressive feelings, it interferes
with learning,therefore, causing decreased self-confidence,
it's associated with viewing thousands of deaths yearly,
and, perhaps, most important of all, it destroys natural
play that stimulates good feelings in children and
decreases stress.

In brief, the negative effects of television abuse are multifaceted,
multifactorial and synergistic. The TV causes of child abuse are
so insidious the family isn't aware of the damage until it is too late.

The negative effects of television generate multiple types of child
abuse as follows:


  1. It includes emotional child abuse with its rejection,
    isolation, coldness, and isolation. Viewing 1,000 to 10,000
    murders per year and the negative emotions this entails is
    emotionally abusive.

  2. It directly interferes with cognition, both emotionally,
    via the negative feelings that interfere with learning,
    and, also, behaviorally. Emotionally, the aggressive and
    anxious feelings stimulated by TV interfere with kid's
    ability to think clearly.

  3. Regarding behavior, children make more time for TV and
    less time for learning. This is behavioral abuse since TV
    is seducing children into changing their good habits for
    negative, unhealthy ones.

    Another form of behavioral abuse is when television seduces
    children into choosing TV over play. Hence, they play less
    and experience less of the multitude of positive benefits
    of play.

  4. TV is socially abusive because it isolates children, not
    only from their families, but, also, their peers.

  5. TV is sexually abusive (emotional child abuse) to children
    because it often exposes them to adult content, which seduces
    them into desiring to leave childhood earlier than is good for them.
    The result is many children lose their childhoods.

  6. TV, due to junk food ads, is physically abusive in that
    it contributes to child obesity, and it causes children to
    consume foods that are unhealthy for their bodies and
    brains.

  7. TV is abusive to the long term health of children. One
    long term 2004 study
    found that children who watched more
    than two hours of TV per day between the ages of 5-15,
    suffered health problems years later. One of the
    recommendations was that children under three should not
    watch TV at all.

  8. Psychological and subliminal brainwashing abuse through
    repetitive advertising and the use of both overt and covert
    stimuli to convince the viewer to desire and buy the
    product. Subliminal stimuli are those parts of ads that
    don't catch our conscious attention, but are still sensed by
    our brains and can influence us. Subconscious sexual
    stimuli are used to seduce our children in this manner,
    another form of emotional child abuse.


To learn how the corporate negative effects of television control
our children's desires and causes addiction through psychological
means, click here.

The negative effects of television on our children are complex
and manifold.

Consider how these TV stimulated cognitive, emotional,
behavioral, physical, social, sexual, and psychological
causes of child abuse take their toll on our children? In
the worse case scenarios, our children lose their friends,
family, healthy activities, physical health, and become
addicts-addicts that our society, as yet, has not
officially recognized. Then, when they reach their teens,
and that critical period of heightened impulsivity, they
are more likely to commit suicide.

If these TV initiated causes of child abuse aren't enough,
experts are predicting that addictions from computer games
will prove even worse than TV as causes of child abuse

Don't believe it? South Korea, perhaps the most advanced
country in the world, regarding technological entertainment,
possesses a massive public health problem due to addiction
of the type discussed herein. Expect the negative effects of
television generated child abuse to worsen.

Matt Bacl of "The Age" writes:


Addiction to computer games is as serious as gambling and
drug use, a psychologist has warned.

Computer game addicts spend so much time playing they can
lose their jobs, break up their families and stunt their
social development, says clinical psychologist Jo Lamble.

...Overseas, the problem has become so great that clinics
are opening. One in Amsterdam is swamped by calls for help.
In the US, the Computer Addiction Study Centre in
Massachusetts is treating dozens of addicts.

In South Korea, gaming is a national obsession and experts
warn it is a bigger addiction concern than alcohol, gambling
or drugs.


This adds up to big time computer game initiated causes of
child abuse that appear worse than the negative effects of television.

What is the solution to the child abusive negative effects of television
and computer games?


  1. We must realize the nature and seriousness of the
    problem and the many TV generated causes of child abuse.

  2. We parents must turn off that TV set, or, at least,
    limit our children to no more than one hour per day, and
    that includes computer-video games as well. Children
    under three years of age should not be allowed to
    watch any TV.

  3. We parents need to think about what our actions tell our
    children. For example, what does it mean to them when we
    turn off the TV when they enter the room?

  4. We parents must take a hard look at our children. Are
    they physically and socially active, alert, happy, filled
    with life, or are they fat, inactive, lazy, grumpy and dull?

  5. We parents must talk and socialize with our friends, family
    and, particularly, our children. We can look forguidance
    from past generations who gathered together, told
    stories, played cards and enjoyed each other's company.

  6. We must encourage our children to play and play
    ourselves.


Play is the real antidote to TV generated causes of child
abuse. Play is social. Play is fun. Play is interesting, enlivening
and imaginative and particularly counters emotional child abuse.

For more on TV causes of child abuse, link here to Curb Your
Tee Vee.


Good, old fashioned play is the best antidote to the
negative effects of television and emotional child abuse.

Stop taking your child for granted and glimpse his invisible
world of play, here.

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