A Reflection on the Gradual Reordering of My Life
Over these many, many years as I have been becoming more and more serious about my Catholic faith, I have noticed a remarkable change in myself—one that has unfolded slowly, almost imperceptibly at first, but unmistakably over the last fifteen years or so. In this article, I write about how the secular world has been shrinking in my life, not out of disdain for the people in it, but because its offerings no longer nourish me. I have been moving away from many secular things, both by deliberate choice and by the quiet providence of circumstance. What once occupied my time, my attention, even my imagination, now feels strangely distant, as though it belonged to someone else’s life.
In my youth, I wasn’t a fan of modern music, particularly rock and roll. But in my sophomore year, one morning while getting ready for school, I tuned into the local rock radio station to find out what the current music fad was all about. My friends were into that music, and I didn’t want to be left out of conversations. It felt harmless enough—just a way to fit in, to understand what everyone else seemed to enjoy.
Over the years, my taste in music expanded to that genre, though it never went into grunge or the harsher styles that followed. But now, even that earlier music has become distasteful to me. The beat and melody might still be attractive, but the lyrics—so often vulgar, suggestive, or simply empty—are sickening. That’s what gets people hooked: catchy rhythms and memorable musical notes. The lyrics are an afterthought, or worse, a poison pill wrapped in sugar. I find myself wondering why I ever tolerated it, let alone enjoyed it.
The same goes for television programs. I didn’t grow up in a house where the television was constantly on. Until age sixteen or so, television was rare—a special thing to watch, almost an event. But then something shifted, and before long meaningless programs like Happy Days, Laverne and Shirley, Three’s Company, WKRP, and various variety shows were playing regularly in our home. Looking back, I am appalled that I allowed myself to waste time on such trivia: scantily clad people, taking God’s name in vain, sexual innuendo, name-calling, yelling, and cheap, vulgar laughs. I don’t even find those programs funny or edifying now. The detective and cop shows might have been tolerable—good guys catching bad guys—but even those were repetitive, predictable, and shallow. And for what? To kill time in the evening? Why did I watch that garbage when I could have been reading good books, learning something worthwhile, or helping around the house?
Unfortunately, I was in a marriage once many moons ago where the television dominated the household the moment he walked through the door. It stayed on until bedtime, a constant drone that filled every corner of the evening. And even then, the bedroom television (yes, the senseless bedroom television) often blared until 11:30 PM. That kind of environment was never for me. I complained, he questioned why I wouldn’t watch because I’d have to have something to talk about at work in the morning with my co-workers. I replied that I talked to my co-workers about work, not some stupid television program; that’s what I was paid for— work! I tried to carve out pockets of quiet, busying myself with anything that felt less corrosive, but the noise was relentless, and the contrast between what I longed for and what surrounded me grew sharper with time.
Now that I have been away from television entirely for a good eighteen years, I don’t miss any part of it. I couldn’t tell you what the latest shows are, or even if there are any worthwhile. Yes, I still own a television, and I’ve used it to stream old movies from time to time, but even that has gone by the wayside for Lent this year, and I may not return to it afterward. I don’t miss it. I don’t crave it. Its absence feels like fresh air.
And then there is social media—another thorn I am trying to remove. It is astonishing how easily it lures, distracts, and scatters the mind. Even when I think I am using it “responsibly,” it has a way of pulling me into trivialities, arguments, or endless scrolling. It promises connection but often delivers agitation. It promises information but often makes noise. It promises community but often fosters comparison and restlessness. I am working slowly but steadily, to loosen its grip.
Over time, these renunciations—vapid music, insipid television, thieving social media—have revealed something deeper than mere preference. They dull the mind, yes, but more importantly, they crowd the soul. By tossing them aside, I have begun to see the shape of my interior life gradually reclaimed. What once felt “normal” now feels foreign, and what once seemed harmless now appears hollow. I find that the less I cling to the secular world, the more interior freedom I gain. This is not withdrawal but refinement: a quiet choosing of what leads me toward God and a holy life and away from the emptiness and noise that once filled my days. In that choice, I am discovering a steadier, simpler, more meaningful, and far happier way to live. I write more, I pray more, I read more, I use my life better.
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