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Tried And Tested: What A Three-Week Digital Detox Course Taught Me About My Technology Addiction

I Decluttered My Emails, Smartphone And Life: Here's What Happened
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An average person checks their phone 221 times a day and spends 36 days a year writing emails.

That's one nugget of information I learned during a three-week digital detox course in a bid to make my phone addiction healthier.

I signed up because I had digital guilt. I was online when I was on the phone to my mum, on my phone when I was watching TV and on my laptop while I was watching a programme on my iPad. It frustrated me, but I still did it.

Something had to be done.

I enlisted the help of digital detox coach Anastasia Dedyukhina; she's the founder Consciously Digital, an organisation to help individuals address their productivity when it comes to using too much technology.

Dedyukhina herself decided to take a major digital detox this year and now she's trying to teach others what she learned.

During our first phone chat, she asked me why I went online (usually when I was bored), how I felt about it (it annoyed me) and how I used it positively, to which I wasn't sure any of it was positive.

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Anastasia Dedyukhina

The three-week digital course followed a similar format each week: a phone or Skype call, a webinar to watch online and a challenge to complete.

The course started with an initial conversation about my digital habits and why I felt I wanted to detox. They included:

  • My desire to spend an hour on my phone before bed aimlessly scrolling through Twitter
  • Constant emails coming through to my phone that I always felt I had to read
  • Being on my phone when in the company of other people
  • Ridiculous digital multitasking - I would be on my phone, while watching TV with my laptop on.

The first thing Dedyukhina said was millennials shouldn't feel bad about our use of technology because it's something we've grown up with.

"So what if you love Twitter? I personally think technology is amazing. I use it for my business. It's like, you can have a cake, but you can't always eat it all. You need a balance." she told me.

Aha. So it didn't mean turning off tech altogether but creating better habits around it.

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During the initial chat, Dedyukhina and I got on to the topic of distractions.

In fact, while I was on the phone to her I was also trying to find a birthday present for my sister. My laptop was on my lap and midway through the conversation I realised I hadn't bought her a present yet.

Dedyukhina initially sent over a test to estimate how much time we spend online. My estimate was 465 minutes a day. A DAY. People usually estimate two hours less, I was told. I estimated three hours less, and it freaked me out.

She then sent over a webinar. It was a powerpoint presentation with her voiceover and lasted around one hour.

"Multitasking and having tabs open is our need to always think straight away. They overload our working memory and divide our attention.

"But multitasking makes us exhausted and tired when we switch between these tabs and it doesn't process the information well."

The webinar discussed a few practical tips that resonated well with me: turning your phone notifications off, having controlled distraction time and not going online when you are tired (which is what I did every night).

"When you’re tired the part of brain responsible for controlling behaviour becomes weaker and it won't perform well. It's easy to be online for hours."

I came to two conclusions: I went on my phone/iPad/laptop out of boredom and habit. Those were my triggers.

What did I do?

1. I turned off my notifications on my phone for all apps apart from Facebook Messenger - this included Instagram, Twitter, Whatsapp groups, YouTube uploads and MapMy Run.

2. I also deleted apps that I used to aimlessly browse when I was bored: Groupon, eBay, Vouchercodes, Linkedin.

3. I vowed to not take my laptop into the living room if I was actually watching TV,

It seemed manageable.

What happened?

The inevitable happened, I looked at my phone less. This was because of the obvious reason that it wasn't flashing on and off, telling me someone liked an Instagram photo or wanted to connect on LinkedIn.

I found work easier without my phone distracting me, as well as at home with my housemates without it buzzing on the coffee table for something pointless. Before, I would always pick it up no matter what the notification was.

I didn't miss the apps I deleted at all. When I had time to check Instagram and Facebook and Twitter, it was then I'd be able to read any necessary notifications.

It got rid of the nagging feeling of not concentrating when I made the decision to focus on one thing at a time (TV, phone, laptop).

However, I still succumbed to hours on my phone at night when I was tired and the need to always have my phone near me.

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Email is the bane of my life. Not just work emails, but personal emails on different accounts that are all connected to my phone. I get at least three an hour on my personal accounts and a lot more at work.

The webinar taught me people apparently 1,700 pointless emails are sent a year and 28% of our working time is spent on emails.

"They're used too much instead of other communication," Dedyukhina said. "You should work to reduce the number of emails you receive, filter the remaining and learn to write them better."

The webinar gave examples of programmes that help you do this. Unroll.me for example will unsubscribe your email from unwanted email subscriptions, discover new ones and organise them all in one place. It's free and very quick.

Filters, which can be used by subject, sender, keywords and time, will keep your mailbox in check. Dedyukhina suggested spending a set amount of time per day to check emails - filter, reply or delete, and give a set time for this.

Writing a "good email" has a clear subject line, clear purpose and won't warrant loads of back and forth. It should be short and to the point.

What did I do?

Work emails was probably the biggest burden.

1. I began checking my emails before I got to work (while I was already on my laptop in the morning, or the nght before) to sort through them making it easier when I got to work in the morning. This was my dedicated time to declutter my inbox.

2. I set up an "emails to reply to" folder. I always have a constant nagging feeling that I am forgetting to reply to someone, so if that folder was empty, that feeling would (hopefully) go away.

3. I also set up filters to prioritise emails I knew I had to read, and gave myself time just after lunch to sort them all out. The feeling of having an inbox at 0 is incredibly liberating.

4. My personal email accounts were a secondary problem. I can leave my phone for four hours in the morning and get to it and have 25 emails: MyWaitrose, TFL, Linkedin, Photobucket. I used Unroll.me to unsubscribe from emails I always delete, as well as manually doing it as well. I asked to be taken off mailing lists and deleted all others that were irrelevant.

What happened?

Workwise, it gave me a completely fresh mind when coming in at 9am. I knew I wouldn't be faced with tonnes of emails because I had taken the time before I got in to sort them.

It also got rid of that nagging feeling that there was always someone to reply to, because I gave myself a system. Going through a load of emails once during the day took barely 15 minutes, but meant there wasn't a build-up of emails to reply to that would stress me out.

With my personal emails, it gave me less of a reason to check my phone and open unwanted emails because hey presto, they weren't there.

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Dedyukhina was chuffed will my email updates on our catch-up call. The final webinar she sent me was about a general digital control strategy.

She asked me what I felt I wanted to do for my last week instead of directing me and I really wanted to tackle the habit of being on my phone for hours at night and stop going on Twitter. I wanted to find a way to stop using my phone as a tool for boredom or continuously go on it when it was in my hard.

Our digital control strategy consists of four points: 1. motivation 2. learn about triggers 3. put boundaries in place and 4. controlled distraction time.

I needed to put boundaries in place to get rid of that Twitter addiction, and give myself time to do it without feeling guilty.

"Choose when you are "on" and have one long session rather than five short ones," Dedyukhina said.

What did I do?

1. Telling myself to not go on my phone every night was not manageable. I gave myself two nights a week where I wouldn't go on my phone before bed. I wanted to read more, but complained to myself I had "no time" to do it.

2. I didn't open or go on my laptop after 9pm (and put it away in a drawer with advice from Dedyukhina).

3. I turned my phone on airplane mode when out on the weekend - I always wanted it to take photos, but that meant getting my phone out, which made me check it, which made me ignore the people I was with.

What happened?

Not going on my phone and reading any book I could find didn't really work, so I splashed out on a book I'd wanted for a while (The Happiness Project). When you have a book you can't put down, it's pretty easy to forget about your Twitter feed.

On the weekend with my boyfriend, who I only get to see on a Sunday, I turned my phone on airplane mode so I could still take pictures but not get distracted by the Whatsapp group conversations and iMessages coming through.

Surprisingly a great thing to do.

I found in social situations, the less I was on my phone, the less other people were too. If my phone was on the table and I picked it up, other people would do similar things. If it was in my bag and not really brought out, nor was theirs. Funny, that.

On our final call, Dedyukhina said I seemed much more positive about how I was using technology compared to the first call.

Being conscious of the fact I was on a "detox", made me do just that. Giving myself set goals and achieving them was satisfying, and not doing what I said I was going to do only made me feel worse.

We discussed how you turned these small habits into a routine, which I had been doing since the beginning of the detox and surprisingly, they felt easier to continue.

The detox gave me practical and easy tips and trick to try, but sometimes watching and listening to the one-hour webinar seemed ironic and hard to get through.

So what did the detox give me? It gave me one huge quality that multitasking and constant phone interaction didn't give me. It gave me focus.

Focus at work when I wasn't worrying about other people I should reply to, focus at home when I wasn't on my laptop while watching TV and focus with my friends and family when I spent more time listening to them rather than looking at my phone.

Throughout the three weeks, the more I added to my challenges, the emptier my brain felt not trying to do everything at once.

A detox will differ from one person to another. While I feel good going offline at 9pm, others might need to make other small changes to give them a clearer outlook on their relationship with tech.

But for me, my digital detox boundaries are very much staying there for the time being, and hopefully a while after that.

Sign up for Dedyukhina free, one-week email course, or take part in a six-week digital detox for £149.

This August we're running a Digital Detox campaign, where we're championing switching off, spending more time with our loved ones and being more mindful around technology. From inspirational interviews to how it can massively improve your life, we hope to inspire everyone to get out there and reconnect with the world. If you'd like to contribute or blog, email uklifestyle@huffingtonpost.com or tag us on social media using the hashtag #HPDigital Detox

Digital Detox Habits Of Sucessful People
Christopher Nolan(01 of10)
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You’d think as the director of Interstellar, Christopher Nolan would be obsessed with all things tech. But Nolan doesn’t even own a mobile phone. He believes a phone wouldn't give him enough time to "think".

"You know, when you have a smartphone and you have 10 minutes to spare, you go on it and you start looking at stuff," he told The Hollywood Reporter.

"There's always someone around me who can tap me on the shoulder and hand me a phone if they need to."
(credit:Joel Ryan/Invision/AP)
Mary Berry(02 of10)
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Baker and GBBO judge Mary Berry doesn't let technology get in the way of her first passion: Food.

She believes phones and other devices should always be banned at the dinner table and goes one step further with her own family.

"When the children and grandchildren come to see me, they hand in all their games and phones at the door. I call it 'the Downing Street rule', because that’s what they make you do if you go to Number 10," she said.
(credit:Jonathan Short/Invision/AP)
Cameron Diaz(03 of10)
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Although she does have Twitter and Instagram accounts, Cameron Diaz is very strict about the way she uses social media.

She'll only use the sites for work and promotional purposes so that they don't interfere with her every day life.

"I think social media is a crazy-ass experiment on society," she previously said.

"The way people use it to get validation from a bunch of strangers is dangerous. What’s the point?"
(credit:Joel Ryan/Invision/AP)
Scott Mills (04 of10)
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BBC Radio1 DJ Scott Mills values quiet time when he's not at work.

He told HuffPost UK that he's started to have a digital detox every evening.

"I have a kind of rule that after about 8 o’clock in the evening, I try not to check my phone. I realised when I was on holiday recently that it does stress you out a bit, and I think this is true for a lot of people without even realising it.

"I’m the kind of person who, if I get an email I’ll reply to it immediately, and I’ll be checking Twitter all the time and refreshing the internet, and actually I need to not do that because it sends my mind racing," he said.
(credit:AKEM/Rex)
Randi Zuckerberg(05 of10)
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Randi Zuckerberg, sister to Mark (he founded a little site called Facebook), worked as the director of market development and spokesperson alongside her brother until 2011.

But these days she's warning us to be mindful of the amount of time we spend logged on and has a digital-free day once a week.

"I’ve now got to the point where I’ve trained the people around me, so they don’t reach out to me – you can do that! I love the spa. Yoga is also one of my favourite things to do," she told HuffPost UK Lifestyle.

(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Sadie Macleod(06 of10)
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Hip and Healthy founder Sadie Macleod is passionate about having a healthy relationship with technology, as well as food.

"I have a tendency to check my emails at home, but when 9pm comes around I have a computer curfew which is the best thing ever," she told HuffPost UK Lifestyle.

"I implemented it about a year ago when I worked at Conde Nast because I used to get so stressed out at night.

"Now I just turn my phone and computer off at 9pm and then I’ll watch TV and just relax."
(credit:Sadie Macloud)
Arianna Huffington(07 of10)
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Founder of The Huffington Post Arianna Huffington is an advocate of digital detoxing - and she has a top tip for ending your midnight Instagram addiction.

In her book Thrive, Huffington recommends ditching all devices at the bedroom door. She favours a good, old fashioned alarm clock to wake her up in the morning.
(credit:Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
Bill Clinton(08 of10)
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Bill Clinton was once one of the most powerful men in the world - and undoubtably, he still has a huge amount of influence.

Yet the former president refuses to use email.

"I’ve found people have said embarrassing things on email and I didn’t want to be one of them," he said.
(credit:Andy King/AP)
Madeleine Shaw(09 of10)
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Celebrity nutritionist Madeleine Shaw tries to monitor her technology use, but like the rest of us, admits it isn't always easy.

"I do try and turn my phone off at 9pm and leave it in another room, because otherwise I could easily keep doing work and answering emails until 10.30pm at night," she told HuffPost UK Lifestyle."But it's tricky because in a way, I am my work, so I’m working all the time."
Benedict Cumberbatch (10 of10)
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Benedict Cumberbatch has a firm following of fans on social media, but the actor has a great way to make sure his time isn't taken up by the sites.

He simply refuses to have Twitter, Facebook, Instagram...ANY of them.

"I think if I did [tweet] you’d very soon be disappointed because it really is a skill - it’s a skill I genuinely don’t have," he said, according to the Radio Times."Just listen to how much I talk ... and tweeting is about being pithy.

"I think tweeting would take so many hours of editing I’d be lost for doing my job."
(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)