
              I'm Betsy, and I'm an Opraholic. There, I've said it. It's been
                my dirty little secret for the past year or so, roughly coinciding
                with the downturn in the economy. Up until then, I was too busy
                running my consulting business to pay much attention to the small
                television I had strategically located on the far corner of my
                rather large desk. Once in awhile, I would click on CNN to catch
              the latest headlines, but that was the extent of it. 
              Until one day my finger slipped on the remote, and there she
                was, dancing onto the stage, with her theme music pulsating to
                a feel-good vibration and the studio audience clapping rhythmically
                to the beat. She introduced the theme of the show -- how to clean
                up your clutter -- by showing videotaped vignettes of people
                whose homes and desks looked far worse than mine, and promising
                the Nirvana of a clutter-free existence. Okay, I can use this,
                I thought to myself. 
              An hour later, I've seen firsthand how easy it is to take a
                two-car garage chock-full of a lifetime of junk and once again
                be able to get two cars into it. I've seen the messiest offices
                transformed from haphazard piles of files, paper, and magazines
                into models of efficiency -- replete with well-organized, color-coordinated
                files, magazine racks, bookshelves, and even desks clear enough
                to work at. I've seen playrooms strewn with toys over every inch
                of the floor morph into rooms that one could actually play in
                because the toys are neatly organized on shelves and in bins
                -- all waiting appetizingly for junior to make a selection. 
              All it took to transform these spaces was a personal organizer,
                a high-speed camera to record all the action in quadruple time,
                and the embarrassment of being exposed as a slob on national
                television. And for those of us who can't afford to hire a personal
                organizer, we can always buy the book that tells us exactly how
                to do it. (That book is now sitting in my office. I know it's
                under one these piles of paper somewhere...) 
              Okay, I rationalized, maybe this show is a high-protein addition
                to my information diet. Little did I realize what a slippery
                slope I had embarked upon. 
              In the weeks that followed, I frequently checked in with the
                show, which is on every weekday in New York City at 4:00 p.m.
                I learned healthy cooking tips and how to feed your heart the
                right kind of food (as if I didn't know that already). I saw
                Celine Dion perform live, on Oprah. She's a career woman who's
                taken a break and come back to her job on her own terms, I said
                to myself. I can learn something from this. 
              I saw volunteer viewers take
                  the "what would you dare to
                live without" challenge, in which they were forced to give
                up, for a week, "the one thing they couldn't live without".
                In one case, Oprah staff members removed or covered up every
                mirror in the home of a woman who was addicted to looking in
                the mirror, and recorded her reactions. “Survivor” was never
                this juicy. In another case, a woman had every phone removed
                from her home and her cell phone confiscated to see if she could
                withstand the deprivation. “Thank goodness I'm not like that,” I
                said to myself as I adjusted the headset to my office phone.
                Finally, a man who had a computer in nearly every room in his
                house and a pet name for his laptop was finally forced to interact
                with his family instead of his keyboard. Now this was quality
                television. Luckily, no one asked me to volunteer giving up watching
                Oprah. I was hooked. 
              But the worst was yet to come,
                  for I had not yet met Dr. Phil. For those deprived souls who
                  haven't been exposed to him, Dr. Phil is the person whom Oprah
                  calls "America's therapist." That
                must be because he's on Oprah every Tuesday, exploring a topic
                we all secretly want to hear other people talk about. Want to
                know how long you should wait for that single guy you've been
                dating to propose to you? Ask Dr. Phil. Want to know how much
                cleaning is too much? Tune in to Dr. Phil. Want to know if grown
                children should feel obligated to give money to their parents?
                See what Dr. Phil has to say. Want to know if it's “normal” to
                bring a stuffed animal into your marital bed? Dr. Phil will tell
                you. 
              In the process, you can see lots
                  of people – some of whom you
                would consider normal, some abnormal – mortify themselves on
                national television as they allow Oprah's cameras into their
                homes and into their hearts, where Dr. Phil will surely hold
                an unforgiving mirror up to their behavior. Among Doctor Phil's
                favorite sayings are: “Get over it,” “Grow up!”, “Get real”,
                and my all-time favorite – “Duh!”, pronounced with two syllables. 
              "This is not therapy," Oprah disclaims, "but
                a way to show you the kinds of things you may need to think about
                in your own life." Absolutely, I say to myself. I need to
                know what sexual behavior among teenagers is considered aberrant,
                even though I do not have teenage children, or any children,
                for that matter. I need to see a woman who excessively cleans
                everything she touches, just to assure myself, as I sit in my
                messy office, that I am completely normal. I need to see the
                makeovers resulting in "five amazing transformations" so
                I can learn how, if I spend a lot of money and time on myself,
                I can look ten years younger. 
              Okay, so my information diet has got some fat in it. That's
                not the worst part. The worst part is the guilt, shame, and embarrassment.
                It's not as if I can talk about these shows to my friends and
                colleagues. After all, I am a liberated, Ivy League-educated,
                professional woman, not a stay-at-home housewife. The few times
                I have caught myself alluding to something I've seen on Oprah,
                I've had to bite my lip. It would be like admitting to reading
                People magazine instead of Fortune, even though People magazine
                can be so much more interesting. My lip may require cosmetic
                surgery soon, and thanks to Oprah, I know just whom to call. 
              It's gotten bad. I don't just watch the show, I videotape it.
                Client meeting at 4:00? No problem, I just set the VCR so I can
                watch later. 
              Recently, I've discovered the
                  most guilty part of my Oprah pleasure-- "After
                the Show". That's where those of us with high-speed internet
                connections can tune into the online continuation of the juiciest
                topics -- usually those in which Dr. Phil and Oprah's guests
                really let down their hair, now that the TV cameras are no longer
                broadcasting the conversation. It's amazing what people will
                say out loud. Here I learn that there is actually home exercise
                equipment you can use to exercise your vaginal muscles – this
                from the “After the Show” version of “What your Mother Never
                Told You About Sex.” You see, these after-show gab-fests are
                indexed online, and you can watch after-the-show chats even for
                the shows you've missed. Okay, so this high-speed connection,
                which I originally bought to download large documents from clients,
                may be worth 40 bucks a month after all, I say to myself. 
              I know what the warning signs are, and I've hit rock bottom.
                I've tried and failed to watch less. I set my VCR on Oprah so
                I can watch whenever I want. I watch when I'm supposed to be
                working. I watch alone, rather than with others. I lie about
                it. 
              It's way past time to admit it, but I'm Betsy, and I'm an Opraholic.
                Anyone want to share?
              