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Tips to stay off your phone


Breaking the habit of constantly checking your phone requires a mix of changing your physical environment, tweaking your device's settings, and building new analog habits.

Here are some of the most effective strategies to help you reduce your screen time:

Tweak Your Device Settings

·         Switch to Grayscale: Modern smartphone screens are engineered with vibrant colors to keep your brain engaged. Dig into your accessibility settings and turn the screen to black and white. It instantly makes social media and tech feeds less stimulating and easier to put down.

·         Disable Non-Essential Notifications: Turn off push notifications for everything except direct messages and calls. If an app doesn't represent a human trying to reach you in real-time, it doesn't need the power to interrupt your day.

·         Prune Your Home Screen: Move all time-wasting apps (social media, news feeds, shopping) off your first home screen or hide them in folders. If you have to search for the app, it gives your brain a second to ask, "Do I actually need to open this right now?"

Build Intentional Boundaries

·    Compartmentalize Your Digital Work: It is easy to blur the lines between working and scrolling. Try to handle deep-focus tasks—like optimizing website layouts, adjusting CSS, or reviewing monetization dashboards—exclusively on a desktop or laptop. Keep your phone strictly for communication and urgent utilities.

·        The "One Room" Rule: When you are at home, leave your phone plugged into a charger in a specific room (like the kitchen). If you need to check something, you have to walk to that room. This adds a physical layer of friction to mindless browsing.

·       Buy a Physical Alarm Clock: Using your phone as an alarm guarantees it is the last thing you look at before bed and the first thing you see when you wake up. A cheap digital clock keeps the phone out of the bedroom entirely.

Create High-Friction Analog Habits

·      Keep Physical Alternatives Nearby: When you sit on the couch or get into bed, your hands will naturally look for something to do. Swap the device for physical media. Keeping a book of Tamil literature, a magazine, or a notepad on your nightstand provides a rewarding, offline alternative to doomscrolling.

·       The 20-20-20 Rule: If you are staring at screens all day, force a break. Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for at least 20 seconds. It breaks the visual trance and reminds you of the physical world around you.

 

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