Rein in your unhealthy celebrity obsession

<img alt="" src="http://a323.yahoofs.com/phugc/jKWKaeicSDoB/photos/f3d5be16bec604e703078097dc01efe6/mr_8331f848b6b0db.jpg?ug_____Dfg7NYIa8" align="left" height="266" width="400">Do you find yourself fixating on the stars to a harmful degree? Are your weekly tabloid purchases cutting into your food budget? Do you base your outfits and wardrobe pieces on critiques by the Fashion Police and “Who Wore it Best”? Do you devote more time to thinking about J.Lo’s marriage than your own? Follow our 12-step program and nip your celeb addiction in the bud this year. <br><br><ol> <li>Admit that you are powerless over celebrity obsession—that your life has become unmanageable due to reading too many blogs, watching too much “Access Hollywood” and endless stacks of US Weekly back issues. </li> <li>Remind yourself that they are real people and shouldn’t be looked at as higher beings. In the scheme of things they’re completely insignificant. </li> <li>Make a decision to cut back on your pop culture intake. Seriously. </li> <li>Take inventory of all the tabloids you read, all the blogs you visit daily, and all the celebrity-driven television you watch. </li> <li>Time yourself doing each activity and admit that, OK, maybe it’s a problem. </li> <li>Don&#39;t get caught up in or take sides in celebrity feuds. Team Brangelina, Team Aniston, who cares? If you free up some space in your brain instead of focusing on celebs, you&#39;re on the real winning team.</li> <li>Stop buying tabloids on the newsstands. Affordable subscriptions only. </li> <li>Make a list of all the things you’ve been trying to accomplish (seeling things on eBay, more time playing with your kids, taking an art class, redecorating your bedroom) but said you didn’t have time for. </li> <li>Use the same amount of time you devoted to your pop culture with your real life friends and family doing fun and productive activities and accomplishing personal goals. </li> <li>Continue to take personal inventory of your celebrity obsession and when you relapse into old habits, promptly stop reading, watching, or think about something not celebrity related. </li> <li>Recognize that you really don’t need all these things.&nbsp; Designate one hour per day to your celebrity fixation tops. </li> <li>Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, carry this message to others with celebrity addiction, and promise to obey all these rules in 2009. </li> </ol>
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Comments 1-4 of 4
  • Doris R's Avatar
    Posted by Doris R Wed Jan 21, 2009 7:08pm PST

    I think my subscribing to certain stars' news on the internet isn't harmful. It's just that some stars are so commercialized it's sickening. Then I try to get away from them and can't. They there every time you turn on the TV, on the cover of every magazine at the checkout stand and it gets to be an obsession with the public.

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  • legomyego's Avatar
    Posted by legomyego Thu Jan 22, 2009 1:03am PST

    I'm not sure which list is worse.

    The Ask Men fiasco age discrimination list-

    or this piece of rubbish-

    Tina Fey was 97th-nuff said.

    Again, these stars needs to be held accountable.

    Held to a higher standard.

    Applause is a dire neccesity.

    The seperation between us is a distance

    that will never ever be closer or further than the nearer.

    These ppl are in the sky for a distinct purpose.

    Lets gaze, be thankful, and by all means-

    enjoy the many fruits of their views and labor.

    Its always 630-its business as usual.

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  • Habanero♥™'s Avatar
    Posted by Habanero♥™ Thu Jan 22, 2009 6:34am PST

    I am one of the fortunate ones who doesn't care to read about the celebs or care what they wear. I also think each one of the paparazzi should be stripped down to nothing and be photographed at every angle possible.

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  • Disgruntled's Avatar
    Posted by Disgruntled Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:14am PST

    Well, I thought I was a bit obsessed with celebrities until I read this. I can't imagine actually watching Access Hollywood or spending more than 2 seconds worrying about whether I'm on Team Anniston or Team Brangelina. I had a brief spell where I was reading US Weekly but that was because I was taking a tough college course and needed something to read that required zero brain power. Anyway, I am feeling much better about myself after reading this.

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