This past Sunday I did a digital detox. For me this means no internet on my laptop, and my smartphone had only phone calls and texts enabled.
How did I do it, technically?
  • I paused my laptop (as a device) on my home wifi. My guidelines allow using the laptop, but only to access/edit local files, nothing online. I could have just turned on airplane mode, but that's just a little too easy (one click) to turn off, if I "need" to. I could also have turned off wifi in the bios.
  • I set up an app called Slim Launcher as the launcher app on my android phone. On it, I allowed only 2 apps, the phone and text message app. I've done a digital detox previously with absolutely NO phone usage, but it's tough to not be able to call or text people. And calling people wasn't something that I felt was a problem. It was everything else that keeps me chained to the phone.
  • I regularly use an old kindle fire to listen to podcasts. This device was wrapped up in a towel and put in the closet.
  • I regularly use another old kindle 4th gen for reading. It's not backlit, has no touchscreen, and the wifi is always turned off. I have lots of books on it, that I transfer using the Calibre app and a cable. Works great, and I don't consider it off limits during a digital detox.
  • I have gotten almost all of my regularly used files off the cloud. I used to be a big user of apps like Google Docs, and Workflowy, and now have all that kind of app local. As a matter of fact, I'm using mostly just text files. They work just fine for most purposes. That way I can take notes, and look through my to-do list even during a digital detox, because all my files are local.
How it worked out: It's truly amazing how different your outlook and attitude is, when you can't instantly "check" this or that. Weather. News. Price of bitcoin. It makes you realize how much of your attention is taken up with the next dopamine hit of "newness". A lot.
I really should do this once a week. It puts you in a different headspace, which is really valuable.
Preparing ahead of time is good. Maybe plan to meet up with people, take a bike ride, take a hike. Do some weeding, do projects, fix things around the house. You have a LOT more time. If you don't have an old style kindle to read from like I do, prep some books, or go the library. I'm glad I had music, downloaded to my laptop. Instead of listening to podcasts (I'm trying to do less of that) I was listening to music. I went through my to-do list the evening before the digital detox, and bumped up a lot of the little and not-so-little tasks that have been there for a long time, that I haven't been doing. Why haven't I been doing them? Because it's so darn easy to waste time online. And my phone is constantly constantly calling me - check this, check that, see if someone responded to something. Quieting that insistent voice is important, at least occasionally.
Things to improve: The Slim Launcher app on my phone is better than just trying to use willpower to not click on the apps you normally use. However, it's somewhat easy to bypass. It's the best option I've found for limiting your apps, and still being able to use your smartphone as a phone. I researched and found it about a year ago, it may be that there's better options out there now.
My ideal would be some kind of launcher app that allows certain apps (like for me, phone calls and texts), but if you want to bring up another app, you have to do something inconvenient. Like a Captcha, but not quite that. I'm thinking - maybe just type in a very long, complicated password with lots of numbers and symbols.
I call this concept PIM - please inconvenience me. I would love to see some launcher apps like this, that allow you to use the addictive apps. But there's a "cost" - you have to do something annoying first. This could be extremely effective in preventing that reflexive "Oh, I gotta check..." Because checking anything entails doing some tedious work first.
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I don’t mean to trivalise your efforts, but I…
…don’t want to lose my cowboy hat
Why are you trying to listen less podcasts? Because listening to more podcasts is what I am trying to do. I just find it fascinating that you have the opposite goal haha
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Podcasts are wonderful and I've learned so much from them. I went from being absorbed with libertarian podcasts, to bitcoin podcasts, to carnivore podcasts.
But I've gone full-on into podcasts a bunch of times, for months on end. This means that I would turn on a podcast when doing ANYTHING that wasn't absorbing, like work or reading. That means I would turn on a podcast when just going to the bathroom.
And it felt like the podcasts were colonizing my brain. Like I had this craving for a voice inside my head, to distract me from the "discomfort" of being a little bit bored, a little bit at loose ends. It's another dopamine source. It distracts you from doing real things, in your own life, as opposed to listening to other people.
I'm working on listening to podcasts now only while I'm sunbathing, or doing yardwork.
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A necessary hygiene ritual, I think. I'm still coming to terms with it.
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That's great. It's nice to sort of reset your systems every so often.
I do an annual news-fast for the month of October. I still interact with people online, but I stop following current events. I've never felt like I really missed out on anything important, since I still hear about really big events like the attack in Israel last year.
I chose October because it's the month leading up to US elections and our news becomes even more purely propaganda than it normally is.
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Looking forward to the day I'll do this...
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I love this. I have a co-worker who has an app on his phone to block him from using Facebook during working hours, and I've also seen people manually edit their Hosts file to block websites, and I like those as small hacks to avoid specific addictions, but truly taking the time for a digital detox (one that lasts this long, as opposed to "I'm going to spend the afternoon reading and offline") is something I want to look into.
Also a big fan of Calibre for loading up my Kindle.
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I also edit my hosts file to block websites. That's on my main laptop. I have a junk, old, slow laptop that I use for whenever I want no restrictions.
I think the more unusual and difficult that we find this kind of digital detox, the more we need it.
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Grayscaling as well?
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I tried setting my phone to grayscale. For some reason it didn't work for me. I think there were apps in which significant information was transmitted via color.
Also it just kind of looked weird and vaguely upsetting. It's like having a gray kindle. I hate reading on a gray kindle, I always put a colorful vinyl skin on it.
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I am in my phone. Cant but back colors anymore. 😅
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