421 lines
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421 lines
16 KiB
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[1]
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[2]Blog
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• [3]About
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• [4]Portfolio
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• [5]Shared Future
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• [6]SOS
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• [7]LP
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• [8]Blog
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• [10]About
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• [11]Portfolio
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• [12]Shared Future
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• [13]SOS
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• [14]LP
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• [15]Blog
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[16]Follow @collabfund
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My Month Without a Smartphone
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Jun 9, 2024
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━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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SHARE ↓
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by [17]Ted Lamade [18]@collabfund
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• [19]
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• [20]
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• [21]
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• Copy Link
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Guest post by Ted Lamade, Managing Director at The Carnegie Institution for
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Science
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On a rainy morning earlier this spring, I pulled my car out of our driveway to
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take my seven-year-old son to school. After shifting from reverse into drive, I
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looked at my phone to listen to a podcast on Spotify. Then it happened. He said
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it.
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“Dad, why do you have to look at your phone SO much?”
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Dagger.
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I knew it was coming. It was only a matter of time. Whether I was texting,
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emailing, or aimlessly flipping through Twitter, I had noticed him glaring at
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me recently while doing so.
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With my car stuck between the driveway and the street as rain pelted my front
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windshield, I was equally stuck trying to respond. Eventually I muttered some
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lame explanation in a pathetic attempt to defend the indefensible.
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I peered into the rearview mirror to see if he had bought it.
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He hadn’t.
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The look on his face said it all.
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I pulled the car back into the driveway, turned around, and asked him plainly,
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“Does it seem like I am ALWAYS on my phone?”
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He replied,
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“Well, not ALL the time, but a lot of the time. Why do you have to look at it
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so much?”
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Want to know what stung the most?
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It was that he didn’t seem mad. It was worse. He just seemed disappointed.
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After repeatedly telling him and his brother to get off their iPads, TV, and
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other devices, here he was telling me to do the same.
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Like the dad who gets called out for using drugs himself in the 1980’s War
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Against Drugs [22]commercial, I was the definition of a hypocrite.
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The question was, what was I going to do about it?
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I told him I would look at it less, keep it in my room when I was home, and not
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bring it downstairs. I stayed true to my word….for about a week. Then this
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discipline broke down and like someone on a crash diet, I reverted to my old
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ways. Back to the phone, back to aimlessly flipping, back to my son glaring at
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me.
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Then I read Jonathan Haidt’s book, “The Anxious Generation”. If you haven’t
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heard of it, here is the [23]link. Buy it.
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If you don’t see yourself reading a book, try reading this article by Haidt
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titled, “End the Phone Based Childhood Now” ([24]link).
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If you’re simply not a reader, listen to this podcast by Bari Weiss,
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“Smartphones Rewired Childhood: Here is how to fix it.” Here is that [25]link.
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All three are eye opening.
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In short, Haidt argues that smartphones and social media are rewiring our kids’
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brains, which is making them the most distracted, depressed, and fragile
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generation in history.
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This shouldn’t come as a surprise given that the companies behind smartphones
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and apps are highly incentivized to keep us glued to them. Just look at what
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Sean Parker, the first president at Facebook, said about the company’s
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strategy,
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“We wanted to exploit a vulnerability in human psychology. To do so, the apps
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needed to provide a little dopamine every once and a while to keep you hooked.
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Me, Mark Zuckerberg, Kevin Systrom (Instagram’s founder), and others knew this
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and we did it anyway. God only knows what it’s doing to our kids.”
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They knew smartphones were the perfect mechanism for delivering dopamine and
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somehow convinced parents to willingly provide them to their kids during the
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most formative part in their lives.
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The results are more than troubling, especially considering smartphones and
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social media arrived on the scene rough a decade-and-a-half ago.
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From a mental health perspective, the correlation is hard to dispute.
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Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 3.45.44 PM.png
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Gen Z’s reading and math scores also began to decline around the same time (
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[26]Nation’s Report Card), while many reports indicate that this generation is
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shyer, more risk averse, and less ambitious than previous generations.
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Are smartphones and social media 100% to blame?
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Maybe, maybe not, but it sure feels like they are at least a significant part
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of the problem.
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Knowing this, and recognizing that I have two young boys who are going to be
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begging for smartphones in a couple years, I asked myself,
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“How am I supposed to tell them that they can’t get one if I am on mine all the
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time?”
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So, I did something a bit odd — I went out and bought a flip phone.
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That’s right, a flip phone. This is it.
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Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 3.45.53 PM.png
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Anyone over the age of 40 remembers it. Basic screen, grainy pictures, no
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email, no apps, multiple clicks to text one letter, and most importantly, no
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social media.
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When I turned it on for the first time, it felt like traveling back in time.
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I used it for a month and here are my biggest takeaways:
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1. I was significantly less distracted
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Think about the last time you were waiting in line for lunch, to catch the
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subway, or at a stoplight. Did you reach for your phone? How about the last
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time you were out to dinner. Did you check a text when someone you were with
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went to the bathroom, or worse, in the middle of your conversation? You have.
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We all have. A flip phone liberated me from this.\
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2. I could focus for longer periods of time
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I was able to truly concentrate. This meant doing things like reading long-form
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articles and books, working on projects, and writing without being distracted
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by a meaningless alert.
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3. I was more aware
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Not having a smartphone myself enabled me to observe how many people walk, or
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even drive, around with their phones eight inches from their faces – on the
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subway, in the elevator, at red lights, on the sidewalks, and even crossing
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busy intersections. The more I noticed this, the more I realized how bizarre it
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is. In fact, I kept thinking to myself, if someone took a decades-long nap like
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Rip Van Winkle and woke up today, what in the world would they make of this
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phenomenon?
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4. I was bored more often
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I was bored a lot, but you know what? I actually enjoyed it. Being bored forces
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you to think and to “be in your own head”, which are both incredibly
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refreshing. As a friend reminded me, our generation used to be bored all the
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time as kids, especially during things like long car rides and you know what we
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did? We invented and created ways to entertain ourselves. Our kids could use
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more of this. Hell, all of us could.
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5. I found that some ignorance can be bliss
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Humans are not meant to have instant access to so much information. Yet, due to
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smartphones, we do, which is creating a “[27]filtering effect”. As a result, we
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are gravitating to extremes — reading about wars in far flung places is making
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us more fearful back home, seeing reports of rare child abductions is causing
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parents to restrict their kids’ freedom to wander even the safest
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neighborhoods, watching airbrushed Instagram’s and TikTok’s is convincing kids
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their lives are miserable, and searching WebMD for generic headaches is making
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us think we have brain tumors. My takeaway? Being a bit “in the dark” can be a
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very healthy thing.
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6. I was more engaged with people, my wife and kids in particular This was my
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biggest takeaway. I was more engaged with everyone I came in touch with. I
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talked to my Uber drivers more, chatted with people in the elevator, and was
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generally friendlier. Most importantly, my wife and kids noticed. In fact, my
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older son actually said to me recently,
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“Dad, can you believe how much time other people spend on their phones?”
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“Other people” — what a difference a month can make.
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Now I will say, while this month without a smartphone has been liberating in
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numerous ways, it was not without its issues or drawbacks:
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For instance, managing my calendar wasn’t easy, I was forced to print out paper
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tickets for flights and sporting events, and I had to go back to ordering my
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morning coffee in person.
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I also gained an even deeper appreciation for an app like Waze after getting
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stuck in significant traffic driving home from my son’s practice because I
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couldn’t see that there was an accident on the beltway.
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There were some things that fell in the “mixed bag” category as well:
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While I was less distracted, I missed my group texts given that my flip phone
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only allowed up to four people on a text.
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Access to emails, in moderation, is also likely a net positive of smartphones
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as it enables us to have more flexibility in their careers and lives.
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Cameras are a bit dicier. I originally thought they were a “nice to have”.
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However, after experiencing a month without one, it made me wonder why we are
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choosing to live life like this,
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Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 3.46.02 PM.png
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When we could be living like this.
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Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 3.46.09 PM.png
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Takeaways
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I’m open to be persuaded, but after living life without a smartphone for a
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month, the case for keeping them out of kids’ hands as long as possible is
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pretty damn compelling. Afterall, if adults are as addicted to them as they
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appear to be, what are the chances young and impressionable kids can fare any
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better?
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So, what would I suggest?
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1. A Detox
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Try it for a week, a month, or more. It was liberating. “Detoxing” provided a
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great perspective on just how distracted kids must be with these things, how
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much less distracted they would be without them, and what life used to be like
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before we all became addicted.
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2. Cut out the non-productive apps
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It is ironic, but if the Blackberry got the nickname “Crackberry” because of
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its addictive nature, these modern smartphones are straight up heroin.
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They don’t need to be though.
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This is what my iPhone used to look like:
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Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 3.46.16 PM.png
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This is what my iPhone looks like today.
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Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 3.46.22 PM.png
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Twelve apps, all of which are relatively productive. Also, I found this
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grayscale feature that has made the phone infinitely less interesting, and yes,
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boring…which is a good thing.
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The result?
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My daily usage is down more than 75%, I don’t feel myself reaching for it
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nearly as much, and most importantly, my kids don’t see me on it very often (or
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at least they have said anything yet…).\
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3. Incentivize Kids to Not Use Phones in School
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I am in no place to tell anyone what to do with their kids. That said, I think
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the evidence is pretty compelling in favor of finding ways to limit smartphone
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usage during the school day for many of the reasons I have highlighted. Even
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more compelling is the fact that most kids don’t even seem to want them there,
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so long as that means NO ONE has them at school.
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Look no further than a recent study led by the University of Chicago economist
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Leonardo Bursztyn that captured the dynamics of this social-media trap.
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Bustztyn recruited more than a thousand college students and asked them how
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much they would need to be paid to deactivate their accounts on either
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Instagram or TikTok for a month. On average, students required roughly $50 ($59
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for TikTok, $47 for Instagram) to deactivate whichever platform they were asked
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about.
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Next, the experimenters added a wrinkle to the question. They asked,
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“If we are successful in getting your classmates to deactivate as well, would
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that change the price you would require to deactivate your phone?”
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The typical response stunned the researchers. Not only did the price change, on
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average the students said they would be willing to PAY the experimenters to
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deactivate their Instagram and Tik Tok accounts if their classmates did as
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well.
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More recently, I spoke with someone who ran an Outward Bound trip for middle
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school students and conducted a survey after the trip. Care to guess what the
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kids voted was the best part about the trip?
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Being in nature? Rock climbing? Sleeping in tents? Fishing?
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Nope.
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The top response was being away from their phones.
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So, what, if any, investment implications should come from this?
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That’s for a later date.
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[1] https://collabfund.com/
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[19] http://www.twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=My%20Month%20Without%20a%20Smartphone+https://collabfund.com/blog/my-month-without-a-smartphone/+via+@collabfund
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[22] https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=rfj3dPkeaqI&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fm.vk.com%2F&feature=emb_imp_woyt
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[23] https://www.amazon.com/Anxious-Generation-Rewiring-Childhood-Epidemic/dp/0593655036
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[24] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/03/teen-childhood-smartphone-use-mental-health-effects/677722/
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[25] https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/smartphones-rewired-childhood-heres-how-to-fix-it/id1570872415?i=1000650431219
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[26] https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/highlights/ltt/2023/
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[27] https://tedlamade.substack.com/p/safer-yet-more-afraid-than-ever
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[28] http://www.twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=My%20Month%20Without%20a%20Smartphone+https://collabfund.com/blog/my-month-without-a-smartphone/+via+@collabfund
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[43] https://collaborativeholdings.com/?_source=collabfund.com
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