Category: En

  • 8 Ways to Put your Phone Down More in 2021

    8 Ways to Put your Phone Down More in 2021

    As we enter our third national lockdown in the UK, our screen time has never been higher. I think we’d all agree it’s getting harder and harder to step away from a screen. Ofcom found that during the first lockdown, Brits were spending 40% of their time watching TV and online video, and that’s before working online, or browsing social media. But, this time we’re are not just entering lockdown, we’re also starting a new year. So, here are our tips to help you revamp your screen use and get the most out of this new year!

    #1 Turn it off

    The first and most obvious tip is – turn it off. It’s easier said than done, each one of us will have fears about being unreachable, even for a short period of time. However, fears like that are almost entirely unfounded. To kickstart a new habit of leaving your phone off for period of time, why not try to turn it off for one hour a day- it’ll be harder than you think- then you can ramp it up.

    #2 Leave it at home

    An extension of the first tip is to leave your phone behind when you leave the house. Lockdown is actually the perfect time to start this as you have no excuses- you can’t go anywhere other than to shop or exercise anyway! We challenge you to leave your phone behind when you do your weekly shop, write a physical list for a change and go out into the world. It may seem scary or unnerving at first but we lived without up until a decade ago- you can do it!

    8 Ways to Put your Phone Down More in 2021
    # 3 Phone-free Zones

    Another way to ensure that you don’t bring your phone everywhere, surgically attached to your hand is to enforce physical boundaries. For example, you could ban phones from the dinner table, or your bedroom as we have often recommended. This way, you have to focus on conversation with friends, family or your partner and, as a side benefit, you’ll get much better sleep.

    #4 Set time limits

    If physical boundaries aren’t working for you, or you just want to take that next step you could now enforce limits around. For example: ‘I won’t go on my phone before breakfast/ after dinner’ or ‘I will reduce my phone use by an hour, through checking the screen time function in settings’.

    8 Ways to Put your Phone Down More in 2021

    Optimising your devices to reduce use

    We know that putting your phone down can be difficult, especially if you are only relying on human willpower to fight an addictive technology, so we we have some suggestions for optimising your device, to make it easier to reduce your time on it.

    #5 Delete apps

    Again, we are starting with the obvious: take away the time suckers. You can look through the screen-time feature on smartphones to see which apps you spend the most time on, but it’s likely you already know. Common culprits include social media apps. We’re not saying you have to delete your accounts, but if you delete the app you’ll have to log on to the desktop each time you want to check it- meaning you’ll do it less and less.

    #6 Turn off notifications

    Another variation on the theme of deleting apps is to turn off your notifications for those time-sucker apps. For example, you could turn off the notifications on your email but leave the red badge on the app so you know how many you have- meaning you will not miss anything but won’t be interrupted in your day. You could employ similar strategies for Facebook Messenger and other social platforms which regularly interrupt your focus and time.

    8 Ways to Put your Phone Down More in 2021
    #7 Greyscale

    One of the most addictive qualities of our phones is their display. It’s colourful and attractive, so that that our eyes are drawn to the apps which will take up most of our time- all social media platforms have brightly coloured apps don’t they? It might not sound convincing but turn the display to greyscale and soon you’ll notice a difference in your ability to put your phone down.

    #8 Reorder your home screen

    One of the reasons we end up spending hours longer than intended on our phones, is that our fingers automatically reach for our favourite apps, whether they be games, social medias or anything else. So, our top tip is to regularly rearrange your home screens so that you have to actively look for the apps you want and consciously make the decision to click on them- this small barrier may give you the time to decide to put your phone down. When reordering your home screen, you can also place tools at the front and hide the less useful apps on subsequent screens, to remind yourself of the primary use of the device each time you open it.

    8 Ways to Put your Phone Down More in 2021

    We hope that these tips will give you some ideas to help you put your phone down, this lockdown and this year, as we hopefully move towards a life a bit closer to normal in 2021.

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • 10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens

    Happy New Year! Glad 2020 is over as much as we are? Pandemic apart, it’s the time of year where we think about what we’d like to leave behind in the old year (all of it?), and what habits will serve us better in the new one. We’re suggesting ten digital detox resolutions which will make a big difference to your physical and mental health as you start this new year. These ten tweaks will benefit every aspect of your life, improving your relationships, helping you sleep, giving you more time to focus on the things that matter to you, leaving you happier, focused and more productive.

    Let’s leave behind what feels like the entire year we spent on screens in 2020 and go into 2021 with an appreciation of how to use screens for good, jettisoning the bad.

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for a Healthier, Happier New Year

    #1 Set boundaries

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Set your ‘do not cross’ lines for screen use

    Screen use per se has never been a problem. Screens help us connect, work, and inspire and entertain us. The problem comes when we use screens without any boundaries. Boundaries between work and play, boundaries between day and night, boundaries between essential and time-wasting use. This first of our digital detox resolutions is the most important. Set clear boundaries for your screen use. It doesn’t matter what these are, how small or how ambitious, just set some limits or rules and then monitor how you do against them. You could start with just one hour away from your smartphone a day and see how that feels. Most people find this hard to do when they start, so don’t give up at the first hurdle. Give it a go.

    #2 Protect your sleep

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Sleep like a dog does in 2021, easily.

    Sleep is the first casualty of our screen obsession. When we’re tired we lack the self-control to stop that mindless night-time scrolling that can impact our mental health – and, if we’re spending the time online shopping, can put a serious dent in our pocket. Think about how you can introduce small hurdles to any late-night screen scrolling. If you can’t bear to get an alarm clock and/or put your phone outside the door, plug it in the other side of the bedroom so you have to get out of bed to check it. This deceptively simple hacks cuts down on quite a bit of nocturnal scrolling. Set nighttime mode on your phone and logout of social media apps too, when you go to bed. All of these will give you the time to think about whether you really want to spend another hour on your phone after dark.

    #3 Get outside, every day

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Just put one foot in front of the other and get outside

    This isn’t another of those resolutions about taking up running or even jumping on a bike. We simply suggest that you get outside your four walls at least once every day and gently walk to a pre-determined place and back. The point here is that it’s actually harder to walk and scroll (though plenty of people manage it of course), than it is to sit and scroll, and the fresh air and natural daylight will give your Zoom-addled brain and eyes a rest. If you want to go for a run of course, that’s up to you.

    #4 Put people before phones

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Even socially distanced, you can still catch-up face to face

    Last year we were very restricted in who we could meet up with face-to-face. Despite this (or maybe because of it), many people reported that even those they were spending the most time with spent hours on their phones ignoring them. Phubbing (snubbing someone for your phone) doesn’t feel good when it happens to you and we’re all guilty of it. Make a resolution that when a choice is presented between a person or a screen, to always choose the person. And seek out opportunities to connect in person more in 2021. We’ve all had enough of video calls to last a decade.

    #5 Find mindful alternatives

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Find your mindful alternative for 2021

    We’ve written a lot about the joys of yoga, crafting, cookery and puzzles but your mindful activity doesn’t have to be any of these. Simply find something you can do off screens which utterly absorbs you and enables you to completely switch off from everything else going on around you. When we are in a mindful state, also called being ‘in flow’, it gives our brains time to rest and leaves us feeling rested and rejuvenated,. Make 2021 the year you find, or rediscover, what this activity is for you.

    #6 Tame notifications

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Stop your phone shouting at you

    The silicon valley tech companies that design the hardware and software we’re all so in thrall to, make them very difficult to ignore. They buzz, vibrate, ring and interrupt us constantly. With an average of 40 apps on each of our smartphones that’s a lot of notifications. Make 2021 the year you radically cut down on the notifications you get from your smartphone which pull you away from what you’re doing and interrupt your focus. Be ruthless about which notifications are essential and which you can leave behind in 2020. The fewer notifications you get, the better.

    #7 Press pause regularly

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Pause more, without your phone, in 2021

    If you can’t get outside, we want you to at least try some mini-pauses away from your screens, indoors. We suggest you actually schedule these like regular dates with yourself in your diary. That way work and distractions won’t just bleed into time you’ve carved out for yourself. Fifteen minutes, just you and a cup of tea, staring out the window or listening to music, with no smartphone in your hand is a good place to start.

    #8 Go audio

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Not every call has to be a video call

    When we spend too much time on screens our eyes start to become very sore and ‘gritty’ with the reduced blinking we do. Digital eye strain is on the rise and last year we spent hours more time staring at screens than usual. We suggest that you look for audio alternatives wherever you can to staring at screens in 2021. Podcasts are a brilliant place to start for your entertainment alternatives (we’d love you to try out ours), and audio calls rather than video calls, are another good strategy. Make it your goal to find as many ways as possible to substitute audio for video in 2021.

    #9 Keep track (but not obsessively)

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Keep an eye on how you spend your screen time

    If you want to cut down on screen use in 2021 you need to know what the starting point is. Built-in features on iPhones and android devices can all tell you how many hours you’re currently spending on your screens. Don’t get obsessive about tracking, as we think that’s pretty unhealthy too, but arm yourself with the knowledge on the size of the problem right now. Then take action. Check back again in a week or so, to see if any of your changes have made a difference. Then tweak and repeat. Think of it like calorie counting, not a habit you’d want to do for life, but very useful every now and again to get information on your habits.

    #10 Eliminate digital junk food

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens
    Like food, not all digital choices are healthy

    Talking of calories, the last of our digital detox resolutions is about working out what’s healthy and what isn’t, about your existing screen use. “But we need our screens for connection, for work, for navigation” we hear whenever the subject of digital detox comes up. Well, of course you do. But you know as well as we do, that that type of screen use isn’t the problem. It’s the two hours you spend on Instagram when you only jumped on to check the latest updates. It’s the hours spent doom scrolling when you meant to check one news site for the headlines. In the same way that you know what food is healthy and what’s junk, the best thing you can do for yourself in 2021 is to work out the same for your screen use. We bet you know already where the problem areas are. Tackle them! If you can keep the productive and inspiring aspects of the digital world, cutting down on the toxic and time-wasting, this will be the most life-enhancing of all of our digital detox resolutions. Good luck, we’re rooting for you!

    10 Digital Detox Resolutions for 2021, after a Year on Screens

    If you need more practical help and inspiration, our digital detox course has a 40% discount until 31st January 2021, with the discount code NEWYEAR40, to help you with all your digital detox and digital wellbeing resolutions this year.

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • The Current Status of Addiction Recovery in Pennsylvania

    The pandemic continues to affect virtually every aspect of American life, and that, sadly, also includes those suffering with an addiction – including opioids.

    It’s holiday season, 2020. Undoubtedly, a different kind of festive season than normal for many Americans, but… it’s still the holidays, nonetheless.

    However, for many families, there’ll be empty places at the dinner table this year – loved ones missing not because of the dreaded and awful coronavirus pandemic that continues to tragically affect the U.S., but from fatal opioid drug overdoses, part of a national epidemic that was here long before COVID-19 ever became part of our vocabulary.

    Take a few moments out of this day to look back at the statistical data for the U.S. opioid epidemic, and you’ll see the highest peak in opioid-related fatal overdoses was during the first half of 2017 – in virtually every state across the nation. Only 3 short years ago, U.S. citizens were dying at a rate of around 130 every single day.

    It’s difficult to fully comprehend, but it happened – surely, we’d never see such death rates again (we’ll get to the dreaded “corona” shortly, which is now, more tragically, taking many more lives per day).

    Back to the opioid epidemic.

    A range of pain-killing medications, arguably misbranded by Big Pharma, were being prescribed freely across the U.S. in a practice that went on for over 20 years, leaving thousands upon thousands unknowingly dependent on powerful narcotics, and with a chronic medical condition – opioid use disorder (OUD).

    Like the layered tragedy of a Shakespeare play, just when you thought things were actually looking up (as the national rate of opioid-related deaths began to noticeably fall), along came a global accident-waiting-to-happen – the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Take a further few moments to access everyone’s favorite search engine, type in “US Covid Latest 2020,” and you’ll see the latest statistics about how badly the nation has been hit by the pandemic. Over 335,000 deaths, and still rising.

    However, the pandemic continues to affect virtually every aspect of American life, and that, sadly, also includes those suffering with an addiction – including opioids.

    In Beaver County, Pennsylvania, District Attorney David Lozier recently spoke about how his region is being affected by the virus in terms of the detrimental impact on people’s mental wellbeing, including rates of opioid use and addiction:

    COVID has sucked the wind out of every other issue. Now this year, the [drug overdose] numbers are going up like 2016 and the first half of 2017. We’re seeing an increase in domestic violence, Childline and child abuse calls, a worsening mental health picture, and worsening drug and alcohol pictures. The people who need support services or who are in treatment… It’s all been by phone. They haven’t had the in-person contact they need.”

    So it begs the question – what exactly is the current status of addiction recovery in Pennsylvania?

    To answer this, we first need to look at how Pennsylvania stood last year (2019 seems a remarkably long time ago now, doesn’t it?) with respect to substance addiction rates and addiction treatment levels, and how the state stands now, after around half a year of severe socio-economic disruption, including mandatory lockdowns and long periods of social isolation for its residents.

    How COVID-19 Has Radically Altered Addiction Recovery

    2019:

    According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), in 2019, Pennsylvania rehab centers saw more than 19,000 admissions. There’s little doubt, the fight against the opioid epidemic was still being fought (a situation destined to last many years). However, many thousands of Pennsylvania residents were still becoming addicted to the prescriptions written out by their family doctor.

    According to a research study by the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia, it was found that excessive, high-dose opioid prescriptions were still being routinely prescribed following common, minor day-patient surgeries – at a strength strictly advised against by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), for the purpose of reducing the number of opioid-related fatal overdoses.

    So how was the level of access to opioid addiction treatment at this time?

    In short – increasing. For example, under the Blue Guardian program in Lehigh County, PA, police and other first responders would notify the program when they had responded to an opioid overdose. Later, an officer and a certified recovery specialist would visit the person to follow up and discuss their treatment options.

    This hands-on approach was highly successful, as confirmed by Layne Turner, Lehigh County’s drug and alcohol administrator. She stated that, “Of the 52 individual face-to-face meetings, 34 individuals entered treatment. The lesson learned is when the face-to-face contacts are made, 65% of the time individuals enter treatment.”

    Clearly, the state of Pennsylvania was moving in the right direction when it came to accessing and providing opioid addiction treatment for opioid abusers and addicts. In fact, a rate of 65% is far, far higher than the national average for the numbers of drug addicts who make it into such treatment. In 2019, that national rate stood at a lowly 10-13%.

    When you consider that recent estimates say one-fifth of U.S. citizens who have clinical depression or an anxiety disorder will also have a substance use disorder (SUD), like OUD, you quickly understand that the very last thing the nation needed in fighting addiction was the soon-to-arrive COVID-19 pandemic, with its resulting lockdowns and isolation.

    The concerns we have are related to the big challenges people are facing right now with COVID: isolation and uncertainty resulting in very high levels of stress.”  
    Nora Volkow, Director of the National Institute for Drug Abuse

    2020:

    The (first) year of the COVID-19 pandemic arrived, leading to the “isolation and uncertainty” and “very high levels of stress” quoted above. Fatal drug overdoses – not just from opioids, but now including cocaine and methamphetamine – are spiking alarmingly across the nation.

    Just like any other U.S. industry, the addiction treatment field has been hit hard, with many rehab centers, including those in Pennsylvania, facing financial collapse if things don’t improve soon. Many treatment centers report clients not making their scheduled treatment appointments – either the simple fear of coronavirus infection, or, worryingly, because more and more of those in recovery are experiencing overdoses and relapses.

    In an effort to meet the changing conditions, addiction treatment centers have also had to invest in new “telemedicine” technology to be able to provide services, where clients receive counseling and other treatment via their computer screens.

    Nonprofits have struggled to treat their clients. In a recent survey, 44% of members from the National Council for Behavioral Health say they will easily run out of money in the next 6 months.

    Interestingly, if you look at the 2019-related paragraphs above, you’ll see words like “admissions,” “individual face-to-face meetings,” “right direction, “access” and “contact.” All of these are being heard less and less, if at all, for many recovering addicts in 2020.

    The sad proof of this lies in the national rise in fatal drug overdoses, as described by the American Medical Association in its updated Issue Brief (October, 2020), which reports that more than 40 states have “reported increases [around 18% – nearly a fifth] in opioid-related mortality, as well as ongoing concerns for those with a mental illness or substance use disorder.”

    And, lo and behold, guess what? Yes, sadly, Pennsylvania is again one of those 40.

    Addiction Recovery = Hope

    However gloomy-sounding this article may appear at first glance, there is a distinctly positive and hopeful side.

    The sphere of addiction treatment, providing long-term, sustainable recovery for OUD sufferers and those with other SUDs, is recovering itself, and this is happening in a number of essential ways:

    • More and more of Pennsylvania’s facilities and clinics are becoming accustomed to the necessary COVID-19 protocols and regulations required in running their treatment options, from residential care, to Partial-Hospitalization Programs (PHPs), Outpatient Programs, and their own counseling sessions and group support meetings.
    • Telemedicine technology, with the addiction experts looking on, is growing, expanding and even researching its own effectiveness as a method of healthcare provision for those with SUDs and mental health issues.
    • As for the telemedicine “patient,” they are becoming more accustomed to accessing their treatment, care and support online, just like the vast numbers of those in AA and NA when virtually “attending” their own 12-Step meetings.
    • If you’re looking for Pennsylvania’s online 12-Step meetings, the links for these are provided here:
    • Finally, the use of Medically Assisted Treatment (MAT), such as the provision of methadone and other MAT drugs for opioid replacement, has had its own regulations relaxed, thus increasing its range of access to those who need it.

    Dr. Mark Fuller, the Medical Director of Addiction Medicine at the Center of Inclusion Health, part of the Allegheny Health Network in Pittsburg, PA, recently stated, “Some folks say that the opposite of addiction is connection – connecting with a therapist, or other friends in recovery, or your 12-step meeting. Those connections are a really powerful part of recovery and really a key step in helping people stay clean and sober.

    How many of Pennsylvania’s reported 800 licensed drug abuse and addiction treatment centers, both nonprofit and for-profit, will survive 2021 remains to be seen. Without the vital professional connections these treatment centers provide, and without the social “recovery community” connections referred to by Dr. Mark Fuller in the quote above, there will clearly be fewer inspiring stories of real addiction recovery happening across the state during this year of coronavirus.

    However, for now, with the excellent strategies listed above, the vast field of addiction treatment – just like the rest of us – is starting to get to grips with the strong and undeniable challenges that lie ahead.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • 10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    We learned a lot in 2020. In January, most of us had never heard of coronavirus, let alone understood pandemic modelling, vaccine trials and mask legislation. But 2020 hasn’t just taught us about COVID-19. Through lockdowns all across the globe, we learnt more about ourselves and others than ever before; how we interact, work, live and what we need to do all of that all successfully. 2020 was the year of the screen. We all stayed home to work, learn and connect online. Here’s our round-up of the Top Ten things we learned about screens this year, and how they impacted us, both for good and for bad.

    #1 They helped us connect

    The best aspect about lockdown was the new avenues created to connect with our loved ones online. Suddenly Zoom quizzes sprang up in every spare evening, families called regularly and despite a lack of plans, everyone was kept up-to-date. Although we are living through an incredibly stressful time, screens helped us to connect and for that we will be forever grateful.

    10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    #2 They showed us we CAN work remotely

    We also learnt that (for the most part) we can work from home. It may be challenging, complicated by housemates and children underfoot, shared workspaces, poor wifi and more, but it is possible. It’s been so successful that many are considering moving their workforce to remote working, or at least hybrid working– potentially changing the shape of office work forever.

    #3 They inspired creativity and innovation

    We were not only treated to new forms of connection, we were also able to watch incredible entertainment created around the restrictions of COVID. The Old Vic hosted virtual productions of ‘A Christmas Carol‘ whilst Comic Relief put on a Zoom-based Cinderella pantomime, both with great success. Despite the losses the entertainment industry, (amongst others), suffered this year the restrictions have inspired amazing innovation.

    10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    #4 They impacted our mental health

    If we were ever in doubt that excessive screen-use impacts our mental health, 2020 cured us of that. One study found a significant correlation between COVID-19 lockout and the increase in mental health struggles in the UK which they linked definitively to the increase in screen-use associated with the coronavirus restrictions.

    #5 They bred doom-scrollers everywhere

    We’ve highlighted the issue of doom-scrolling before. It’s the act of mindlessly scrolling through one negative story after another in an endless cycle. Due to all that extra time, and a tsunami of bad news, this bad habit boomed in 2020, leading to many falling deeper into negativity and anxiety as they were unable to switch off.

    #6 They helped conspiracies spread too easily

    Our founder, Tanya Goodin, has written about the difficulties arising from the prevalent spread of conspiracies online. Whether it is QAnon, anti-vaxxer or plan-demic related, many conspiracies have risen to prominence in 2020. Fake News, mistrust of the media and isolation have all worked in tandem to create an environment rich for manipulation, and too many of us are falling for it. If you’re worried about someone in your life falling foul of a conspiracy theory, we recommend listening to our podcast with Prof. Emily Bell on the subject, or you could read Goodin’s article for some tips.

    10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    #7 They made our sleep deteriorate

    Since the dawn of Time To Log Off we’ve been highlighting the impacts of screens on our quality of sleep. Before the pandemic, 42% of adults missed out on sleep due to excess screens, in 2020 this has dramatically increased. Good quality sleep is one of the main building blocks of life and essential for maintaining good mental health. So, we recommend limiting screen use, especially before bed and in the bedroom. Take back control of your sleep habits.

    #8 They showed us online learning is flawed

    No matter how hard education professionals globally have tried to make online learning work for both students and teachers, it has had its problems. Primary school children often struggle to focus without in-person supervision. Some have even pointed out that social (as well as academic) development will slip during this time. Screens, though useful to fill the gap while schools were closed, could not do everything an inspiring teacher can do.

    10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    #9 They made us want to log off

    Over 3/4 of American families committed to taking part in a digital detox after lockdown, due to their experience of increased screen usage during the pandemic. We found we all needed time to decompress without screens this year. The ways we have used screens in 2020 has meant that our work, interaction and entertainment were all totally reliant on them. Most of us felt a large change with this shift online, and acknowledged the need for time logged off.

    #10 They highlighted there’s no substitute for in-person interaction

    Despite the many positives that screens have brought us in 2020, we learned that they can never be a substitute for face-to-face interactions. Whilst we are restricted by the pandemic, we have to use screens for work and for connecting with loved ones but it has taught us without a doubt that we need to prioritise human interactions over screen-based ones.

    10 Things We Learned About Screens in 2020

    One thing 2020 taught us, is to appreciate the many advantages of the digital world as well as highlighting its flaws. We’ve spent many years trying to show what we miss out on when we spend too much time online and 2020 emphasised that for everyone. Let’s look forward to 2021, when we can spend much less time in the virtual world and appreciate the real world once more.

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • Our Top 10 digital detox blogs of 2020

    Our Top 10 digital detox blogs of 2020

    In 2020 we were glued to our screens like never before.  Was a digital detox going to be an idea that had simply had its time, we wondered? The irony was, we’d spent six years trying to show everyone what they miss out when they spend too much time on screens – and the pandemic did our job for us. We all flocked to our devices, and we were very grateful they were there, but never have we been so aware of what they couldn’t do for us.  Never have we all missed human contact so much.

    Record numbers of you came to our site (up 35% on 2019), to get help and guidance in managing your screens healthily this year. We carried on producing our podcast right the way through the year, and we produced digital detox blogs and articles every week on topics you requested. Here, at the end of this rollercoaster year, is a round-up of our 10 most popular posts from 2020:

    10. Six Ways to Beat Social Media Addiction

    Our Top 10 digital detox blogs of 2020

    Social media, and our struggle with it, was a real theme this year. Our post at #10 on the year’s list gave you some ideas on how you could beat your addiction to scrolling, in a year when everyone found putting their devices away especially hard.

    9. A Brief History of Digital Detox

    We thought we’d give you a bit of reading material around the subject of digital detox this year, so we laid out a timeline of how the trend has evolved. Users have been concerned about the impact of screen time on our mental and physical health since the dawn of the WorldWideWeb. We trawled through the records to show you that the history of anxiety about screens, and attempts to spend time off them, is as long as the history of screens itself.

     8. Ten Tricks to Stave Off Digital Burnout in Lockdown

    As screen time mounted in the pandemic, everyone began to worry about how frazzled and burnt out they were feeling, especially from all those video calls. So we produced this piece to look at screen burnout specifically, and what you could do to keep it at bay.

    7. Screens and Covid-19

    Our Top 10 digital detox blogs of 2020

    Of course, we produced a lot of content focused particularly around the pandemic and what it meant for our screen habits. In this blog we looked at how we could distinguish between a healthy and productive use of screens and how we could guard against the type of unhealthy habits which were becoming amplified as we spent more and more time on devices.

    6. 6 tips for distance learning in lockdown

    Our Top 10 digital detox blogs of 2020

    Learning from home was a big topic this year as parents and children alike grappled with how to manage it from bedrooms, kitchens and sofas across the globe. We gathered tips from experts on how to make distance learning work, and how not to let it stress you out.

    5. Smartphones and coronavirus

    As the pandemic hit, this blog looked at whether we needed to worry about our smartphones themselves as a source of virus transmission, as well as how we could use them to get the most up-to-date and trustworthy information about its spread. We talked about misinformation and the multiplying of conspiracies about the virus here too.

    4. Our 2020 Digital Detox Resolutions

    Every year we produce a series of resolutions on our screen habits (we’ll be doing one for 2021), and it’s always one of our most popular blogs. Looking back to the beginning of this year, it’s fascinating to see what we thought we might achieve this year. Spending less time on screens turned out not to be one of them!

    3. TikTok is not safe for kids

    TikTok started 2020 on a strong footing and absolutely boomed in the pandemic as kids (and adults) used it to keep connected and entertain themselves. We’ve always had very big concerns about this platform and felt we had to warn you about some of the dangers. We obviously hit the spot as this was one of our Top 3 most read blogs this year.

    Our Top 10 digital detox blogs of 2020

    2. 7 Signs of Social Media Addiction

    Our second most popular blog revealed what you were all most worried about this year. “Am I addicted to social media” was one of the primary ways people searched for, and found, our site in 2020 and this blog tried to help with laying out some signs and symptoms to be aware of. We hope it helped!

    Which led us to…

    1. How to Do Dopamine Fasting Right

    Our No.1 post this year was about the ‘new’ phenomenon of dopamine fasting. Which of course is pretty much a digital detox by another, cooler, new name! We talked about the differences and similarities and how to do one and you read this piece in your thousands. We really hope it meant you also tried it, and put screens down for some of your year.

    2020 has been a year, for everyone. It’s safe to say it took all our plans and through them up in the air – like all of yours. But, we realised very early on that the demand for our digital detox expertise was actually going to keep growing this year as everyone grappled with enforced screen time, and it really did. You downloaded our podcasts and you kept reading our blogs in numbers that surpassed anything we had seen before. We hope they helped in some way. Do let us know!

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • Return to Sender: What an Unsent Postcard Taught Me About Addiction

    A timely message from my much younger, unsober self.

    Summer, 2020

    The Unsent Postcard

    I have a stack of unwritten postcards, collected from my travels, purchased with the intent of sending them to those back home. In recent months, I have taken to writing out these postcards to friends and family, both to cheer them with sunny images as they shelter in, and to support the United States Postal System.

    Not long ago, I came across a card featuring a hand-colored photograph of a windmill in East Hampton, New York. To my surprise, it was not blank. Tightly scrawled sentences, in rudimentary French, it was meant for a friend in Paris.

    No postage, never mailed.


    17 Septembre, 1991

    Chère Delphine,

    Salut! I am at the beach with my mother. My God! My poor back! I am ready for a big change in my life. We must talk. I’m going to write you a real letter soon.

    Ton Amie, Maria.


    Here I was, standing at the edge of big change, poised to plunge into some grand announcement, too large for the 4” x 6” space given. These words never crossed the Atlantic. Instead, I held them now, between my fingertips, twenty-nine years later.

    What are the chances of this? I thought. Of all these blank cards, only one has writing, and not just any writing, but words that speak to my alcoholic “bottom” — the physical, mental and spiritual low-point of my young life.

    My back hasn’t bothered me for years, thank heaven. I take it for granted. I walk with ease everywhere today. Until this moment, I’d forgotten just how bad things were with my lower lumbar at age twenty-four, that hell year when I couldn’t stand up straight without sciatica shackling my ankles, seizing my spine, and clamping down hard at the cervical vertebrae. This physical agony — an exclamation point to my mental and spiritual state — had literally brought me to my knees.

    I spent weeks in bed self-medicating on whiskey sours and muscle relaxants. Somehow I’d convinced the corner pharmacist to dispense refills beyond the legal limit.

    I‘m skeptical when people make meaning from random events. It feels self-indulgent to interpret every rainbow as a reference to my personal recovery. Yet finding this card, all these years later, didn’t feel like coincidence. It felt intentionally planted to remind me of why I’d sobered up.

    It also felt like something I had to share with others.

    September, 1991

    Watching waves

    In those mellow days following Labor Day, when the water is warmer than the salt air, I was with my mother in a rented bungalow at the tip of Long Island, now emptied of humans. I was twenty-five, unemployed, and reeling from a bad break-up.

    I remember the lunch mom served on or about the day I’d written that postcard: linguine with shrimp and mussels, and flutes of rosé wine. Mom was a faithful clipper of the Wednesday food section of The New York Times. Maybe she’d sourced this seafood pasta recipe there, or maybe she’d been inspired by one of the influencers of Hamptons entertaining at the time: Martha Stewart or The Barefoot Contessa.

    However it came to be, it was a memorable meal presented with panache, from a bare-bones rental kitchen. And it was a meal where my mother enjoyed alcohol as she always did, in moderation. More often than not in my childhood home, there was an appropriate wine, served in stemware, to compliment every dish.

    My mother drank the way Jacques Pépin did on public television, and the way I always wanted to, but never could — with class. At the end of an episode of making something like, say, classic Beef Bourguignon, he would raise his glass of Cabernet Sauvignon in a toast: “Aah-pee Coo-keeeng!” and tilt it lightly to his lips.

    But that’s not the way I drank this glass of blush wine. I downed it.

    Plagued by sciatica, a still larger pain loomed; it had been moving in slowly for years, like a cold front, now dipping as an arctic depression over this lovely lunch.

    I remember craving more flutes of Zinfandel than that one bottle held, but I was checked at two because mom was watching. Two drinks were the limit if you were female, and raised right — and you cared about appearances — which we did. But I couldn’t comply.


    I found myself watching the waves from that deck all afternoon. I watched them crest and crash, one after the other, in rhythmic indifference to my pain. Then it hit me. It felt big. Big like the feeling I get reading an inspirational poem from an anthology with a daffodil or seagull on the cover. Though the feeling was big I, myself, suddenly felt small. And weirdly enough, I was okay with that.

    It was a relief. The waves kept rolling in, oblivious to my situation. It was freeing to see that my pain — sharp and ugly — couldn’t stand up to the beauty of light and dark scattering the water’s surface.

    Scared, self-involved me was no match for the folding waves. For hours I watched them flatten at the shore and return to the sea, gradually eroding the moat I’d dug around myself. Yes, my experience of this landscape could be captured in a bad sonnet in a book with a hokey cover — the kind you’d find in a hospital gift shop.

    It was neither subtle nor original, my “white light” oceanfront awakening, but it was genuine.

    The next day, a masseuse with strong hands and a soft voice got me to open up about my drinking on a massage table in Amagansett. A recovering alcoholic himself, Sean R. is much of the reason I made it to my first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting when I returned to Brooklyn that next week.

    1991–2013

    A Bridge Back to a Good Life, Then Some Slippery Turns

    As the postcard predicted, big change followed. “A.A. is a bridge back to life.” That’s true. I did cross over to a full life with marriage, kids, and a semi-detached house. But it was a life further into Brooklyn, and further from my home group, the A.A. group where I had first gotten sober and stayed that way.

    Yes, I was still not drinking, but I can’t claim I was emotionally sober. Somewhere along the way I stopped going to meetings. Lost touch with my sponsor. Quit working with other recovering alcoholics. You know where this is going. Eventually, I drank.

    It started small: communion wine on Sundays, the occasional “non-alcoholic” beer, and the argument with my dentist. He wanted to give me local anesthesia for minor dental work, but I pushed for hit after hit of nitrous oxide on top of that. I wanted to numb my brain, not just my molar.

    “The idea that somehow, someday he(she/they) will control and enjoy his (her/their) drinking is the great obsession of every abnormal drinker.” — from Alcoholics Anonymous, Chapter 3, ‘More About Alcoholism’

    I went along like this for years, skating on the edge of my sobriety, doing figure-eights on April ice, until seven years ago I found myself sitting in the sun porch of my friend Samantha’s historic, center hall colonial home.

    Our kids were playing together somewhere on the periphery. I always found my way here, to this snug room off the parlor, with floor-to-ceiling bookcases and a loveseat. I’d marked it as my space, where I could step away, sink into the cushions and watch the cardinal at the feeder.

    On this day I was thinking about my marriage. It had been a good run, but after fourteen years, two sons and a poodle, it was over. During the past months, this reality had settled over me like snowfall hitting pavement at the freezing mark, melting first, before catching hold, white landing on grey, gradually building, til nothing remained of the sidewalk below. I was scared as hell now.

    Samantha stood over me with finger sandwiches and two flutes filled with golden bubbles on a silver tray. It had been so long since I’d been to a meeting, so long since I’d said out loud to a roomful of people: “I’m an alcoholic.” So long that I had a new circle of friends that never knew I had a problem and older friends who had forgotten that I didn’t drink.

    In that moment, forgot I didn’t drink.

    Alcohol, catching sunlight, was presented to me on a slender stem, the way it had been twenty-two years earlier at the beach.

    Why not? If ever I deserved a mimosa, it’s now.

    I took a sip.

    Holy shit, what the hell am I doing?

    I ran to the powder room and poured the rest down a sink with a swan head faucet.


    “The alcoholic, at certain times, has no effective mental defense against the first drink. Except in a few rare cases, neither he (she/they) nor any other human being can provide such a defense. His (her/their) defense must come from a Higher Power.” — from Alcoholics Anonymous, Chapter 3, “More About Alcoholism”

    It had happened —I had drunk again. I never thought I would. It had been more than two decades since my last real drunk, and I had good reason never to drink again — actually two very good reasons, their names were Leo and Liam. Sure I could rationalize the Sunday morning communion wine and the occasional hit of laughing gas — after all, I was accountable to no one for my behavior now— but when I let that bubbly pass my teeth and slide down my throat, I recognized that for what it was —a slip.

    I remember the taste of it clearly — that citrus effervescence in my mouth — and I remember my conscious decision to swallow. Like countless alcoholics before me, I had now proven what the Big Book drives home in the conclusion of Chapter 3.

    I had had “no effective mental defense against the first drink.”

    September, 2013

    The Room Above the Fish Store

    Thankfully, at the same moment, I realized my problem when I took that sip of spiked o.j. , I also remembered the solution.

    Alcoholics Anonymous had worked for me, for as long as I had shown up for myself and others. What became obvious to me with this slip was that I’d do well to return to a community of recovering alcoholics if I wanted to get sober again, and stay that way. I needed to plug back into a sober support network.

    So on the heels of my slip in late September, 2013, I climbed a staircase to a room above a fish store filled with retired seniors and flies circling overhead. I’d stepped into an A.A. Big Book meeting, already in progress. They were reading one of the personal stories from the back of the book, round-robin style. Right away I could see myself in ‘The Housewife Who Drank at Home.’ When she described herself as a ‘Jekyll-and-Hyde’ PTA mom, I lost it. That was me. Someone passed me a box of Kleenex. I will never forget that kindness.

    September, 2020

    Today

    Willpower and the passage of time are no guarantees against the first drink. I was humbled by this realization when I slipped.

    I like my life today; some days I love it. I don’t live in unreasonable fear, but I accept this fact: on any ordinary day, my alcoholic mind could observe the oven clock turn five and think: A snifter of eighteen-year-old single malt whiskey, served neat, alongside a bowl of salted cashews, would be a fine idea!

    And today I understand, right down to the jelly marrow of my bones, that this is typical alcoholic wishful thinking.


    I also recognize — and appreciate — other approaches to solving problem drinking, or at least to blunting the devastating effects of alcohol and other addictive substances and habits. Some of these solutions have developed in my lifetime, and some have been there all along.

    I have a friend who threw herself back into her childhood faith in earnest, and another who found help in Buddhist-inspired Refuge Recovery. I am happy for these friends, and for everyone who finds lasting recovery, however and whenever. And for those who have chosen the A.A. path, I am especially gratified to welcome back those like me — humbled humans who have returned to the fellowship later in life.


    On the last day of this month, I’ll have seven years back in the rooms. Once again, Alcoholics Anonymous has been a bridge back to a good life. I’ve got a sunny apartment, two sturdy teens, and an Australian lizard. The ex and I have each other’s back in the co-parenting game. I’ve got a day job where I feel purposeful, and my writing at night, which lights a votive in my soul.

    I was lucky to find my way back to A.A. at forty-seven, and lucky to turn up this picture-postcard now — this four-by-six inch card stock talisman, a reminder of who I was at twenty-five, and who I am now, twenty-nine years later — sandwiched between sunbathers on the Jersey shore and Niagara Falls at night. To me this is no coincidence: this postcard, lost then miraculously recovered, does parallel my own recovery, lost for twenty-two years, then found again in a new group, above an Italian fishmonger.

    And so, my dear friend Delphine, here is the full story, the real letter I promised you, delivered now, almost thirty years later. You are not an alcoholic, but maybe some of this makes sense. I hope so. We must talk soon.
     

     

    This piece originally appeared on Medium on September 13, 2020.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • 5 Ways to Stay Off Screens this Christmas

    5 Ways to Stay Off Screens this Christmas

     

    This is post 2 of 2 in the series “Presence Not Presents”

     

    1. We’re dreaming of a Screen-Free Christmas
    2. 5 Ways to Stay Off Screens this Christmas

    2020 has been a hard year. It’s also been a screen-filled year as we all connected with our loved ones, worked and even taught our kids on screens. After such a year it’s understandable that many of us want to log off for the holidays and enjoy a screen-free Christmas, but that’s easier said than done, especially if you are spending Christmas alone. So, we’ve put together five tips to help you stay away from screens as much as possible this year, and finally unwind.

    #1 Schedule screen-time

    2020 is an unusual year. Normally we would recommend putting down screens entirely, at least on the big day. However, this year most of the South of the UK will be isolated in Tier 4 and the rest of the country will only be able to visit one household. This means that many of us will spend time video calling our loved ones, trying to spend time with them on Christmas Day, especially if we are spending the holidays alone. Our advice is to schedule that screen time. Book in calls in advance and try to only use your devices for that communication. By all means, call family and friends, but don’t spend the hours between those calls mindlessly doom scrolling, especially with all the bad news out there this year!

    #2 Phone-free food

    5 Ways to Stay Off Screens this Christmas

    Whilst we may not be able to achieve an entirely screen-free Christmas, the least we can all aim for is a screen-free meal, (like we all managed only a couple of decades ago). So, we recommend instituting a phone box for everyone to put their devices in during the meal, so that you can all focus on the food and truly appreciate the people you are with. You’ll be able to have a much better conversation. And even if you’re alone you will appreciate the ability to mindfully eat without distraction.

    #3 Analogue activities

    Another great way to keep yourself (and your family) offline for a screen-free Christmas is to organise analogue activities to take up some of your phone time. You could do a puzzle, play a board game, read a book, or just sit and snack whilst you listen to some Christmas carols. A firm favourite at Time to Log Off is the Hat Game. This involves everyone putting names of celebs (or at least people everyone at the gathering knows) into a hat, and then in teams one person describing all the people they pick out with one minute on the clock, until the hat is empty. You can even add more rounds with a limit on words, or make it charades!

    #4 Get outside

    5 Ways to Stay Off Screens this Christmas

    One of the best ways to ensure you have a blissfully uninterrupted Christmas is to go outside. MIND recommend spending time outside to help with your mental health, something we all probably need after 2020. On top of that, going outside is also a great way to take your focus away from your screen, you could even leave it behind! We recommend a Christmas walk to get yourself moving again after dinner, but you could also just sit in a garden, or even go for a bike ride if you’re feeling particularly restless.

    #5 Lead by example

    If you want to create an environment free of screens for your family, or housemates, this Christmas, the best thing you can do is to lead by example. If you’re not on your phone at dinner, whilst playing a game, or as you talk, hopefully they will catch the hint and put theirs down more too. If the people you’re trying to convince are family that might be harder, but as long as you are taking part in screen-free Christmas as much as you are asking them to, you should be in with a good chance to get some analogue time this year.

    From everyone at Time to Log Off we wish you a happy Christmas!

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • Was 2020 The Year Of Peak Screen?

    Was 2020 The Year Of Peak Screen?

    2020 was the year when screen time simply soared. Our jobs, education and our social lives all moved online. And when lockdown was enforced, we turned even more to screen-based activities to fill all that newly freed-up time.

    We advocate for a healthy digital-life balance and regular time away from screens, but, we have to admit, not all of the uses those extra screen hours were put to were bad.

    In fact, we think this year has seen us collectively use our screens in a lot of very beneficial ways:

    #1 Staying connected

    This year we all began to dedicate much more time in our week to talk to our friends and family. In fact, many admit they have been talking to loved ones more regularly this year than ever before. As we all became more comfortable with Zoom, and finally had an incentive to download Skype, casually video-calling those close to us has become a large, and enjoyable, part of our lives.

    #2 Entertainment

    With theatres and cinemas shut, shows, films, and performances were all brought online. In the UK, the National Theatre’s ‘At Home’ project saw 16 past productions uploaded to YouTube for free, making theatre more accessible than ever before. And let’s not forget how many of us became regular attendees of all those virtual pub quizzes.

    Was 2020 The Year Of Peak Screen?
    As we were forced to stay home, we had to use our screens for entertainment.

    #3 Education

    Whilst pub quizzes may not have been strictly educational, they weren’t the only form of learning our screens enabled. School and universities courses were moved online, mostly very successfully, as institutions found new ways to deliver education remotely, without compromising the quality. And if that wasn’t enough, more people spent time on educational apps; Duolingo saw an all-time usage high during the pandemic, as everyone decided to use all that spare time to finally try and learn another language.

    Against all that good though, we have been aware of the bad, and downright ugly, screen habits that emerged in this 2020 Year of Screens.

    #1 Doomscrolling

    A combination of a natural urge to check the news with a lot of free time, led many of us to develop the bad habit of ‘doomscrolling‘ ie endlessly seeking out and scrolling through a torrent of negative news stories online. A non-stop diet of negative news has a really negative toll on our mental health. We hope this is a habit that we’re all going to manage to kick in 2021.

    #2 Zoom fatigue and digital burnout

    Several hours a day spent on Zoom or Teams calls, whether for work or education, took a toll on us. The constant staring at a screen is good for neither our physical or mental health, but was sometimes unavoidable as our world shifted online. Dry eyes and tech neck were some of the physical symptoms reported. And then there was the disorientation of not being able to read and interpret non-verbal signals on a screen, as efficiently as we can in real life. All those video calls were exhausting and we soon found ourselves burnt out.

    #3 Social media usage

    Inevitably this tear, our time spent on social media surged. Alongside it, the negative effects experienced by those addicted to social media intensified. Whilst adopted enthusiastically to decrease isolation, prolonged amounts of time spent on social platforms where toxic comparison culture flourishes, can really take a toll on our mental health.

    In 2020 tech was a lifeline. We were able to attend the theatre from our sofa, follow art classes from our bedrooms, and finally persuade our grandparents to download Skype. In a rather isolating year, screens gave us the chance to stay connected. However, we may look back on this year as the year we finally realised that screens, efficient though they are, can’t ever really replace the warmth and depth of our real-world connections. Will we look back on 2020 as the year we reached peak screen, and the year we finally decided to kick all our bad tech habits for good? Here’s hoping.

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • We’re dreaming of a Screen-Free Christmas

    We’re dreaming of a Screen-Free Christmas

    In 2020 we spent more time online than ever before. Australia reported an 80% increase in phone usage over their first lockdown, in the UK our screen-time increased twofold and in the US nearly 75% of families said they wanted a digital detox once it was over. And, it’s not quite over! We still have to get through the holiday season and well into next year before vaccines can solve our problems.

    So, after a year of excessive screen use and isolation, we’re gearing up to spend what is for many the most important time of the year, potentially away from loved ones again. We’re going to have to be even more mindful about our screen use than usual. Ideally, we would be experiencing a completely screen-free Christmas, but as many of us are away from family and friends, that might not possible. Instead, let’s focus on the best ways to connect, both digitally and in real life.

    The joys of screens to connect us

    We’re dreaming of a Screen-Free Christmas

    Previously, we’ve always touted a need to log off on Christmas, to stop posting every second of your day and instead appreciate the people you are spending it with. However, with so many families physically separated, we’re advocating a very mindful screen-use this year instead. This year we have all thanked the Zoom gods at one point or another for the ability to communicate with those we can’t be with. Whether elderly or vulnerable family members, friends who live a little too far away to justify a socially-distanced walk, or even those that we haven’t seen in a while, we’ve all been able to keep up with loved ones through video calls through lockdowns. As we approach December 25th, there are plans being made up and down the country for time slots to call different sides of the family, or different friends who are spending Christmas alone this year. However, that doesn’t mean we should https://www.answeraddiction.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=625078&action=edit&swcfpc=1#edit_timestamplock ourselves away on video call after video call for the whole day.

    Tip: Really enjoy and savour your video calls with family and friends. Don’t multi-screen by scrolling on your phone while you’re on the call., Give them your complete focus and enjoy your time with them on screen.

    Be mindful of those we are with

    We’re dreaming of a Screen-Free Christmas

    You may be quarantined with your pet, the housemates that you’ve survived two lockdowns with, your family or a new bubble of those you haven’t been able to spend time with in a while. No matter how big or small your group, how familiar and irritating they may be, try to really appreciate their presence this year. Regardless of how many people you are celebrating with this year, take some time offline to really be with them. Don’t share every present/course on your Insta story, try not to stay in the mindset of working from home and check your emails, and most importantly stay away from a doom-scroll, guaranteed to ruin your mood. Talk to the people you are with: make a puzzle, play a game of charades, ask each other questions about how the year was for them – and celebrate.

    Tip: Get everyone to put their devices away together for a specified period of time (maybe while you are eating, or opening presents, or go for a long walk together). Give yourselves the space to really enjoy and appreciate each other’s presence.

    We’re dreaming of a Screen-Free Christmas

    After this year, of all years, we should celebrate those we love. We’re still here, and there is a light at the end of the tunnel in the form of vaccines. So, take some time to enjoy the company of your loved ones, to bask in the annoyances and petty squabbles of the festive season, and try to switch off your phone. As much as you can, aim for a screen-free Christmas after your year online. Use your screens for life-enhancing connection, not mindless scrolling, this holiday.

    View the original article at itstimetologoff.com

  • Sending Your Loved One to Rehab During the Holidays

    It isn’t easy to be without loved ones during the holidays, but if you have a family member struggling with addiction, it may be the right time to send them to rehab. (more…)