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How to Stop Doomscrolling | Technological

techtost.comBy techtost.com18 March 202508 Mins Read
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How To Stop Doomscrolling | Technological
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The world is bad sometimes, but it feels even worse if you can’t stop looking at the abyss that consumes all 6 -inch display of a smartphone, following you through space and time. It taunts you with the compact, lightweight building that is small enough to slip into your pocket and get anywhere, and the call of the siren is so strong that for some reason, we cannot sleep without our phone in our nightlife.

As we evolve the horrors around us, it may happen to you that you will feel calmer and more careful and balanced if you have not taken your phone dozens of times a day at Doomscroll. Is confused with our brains To cross our day with the flashes on the most extreme, tiktoks involvement calipers, just to return to x or bluesky and overwhelmingly see new headlines.

Like any bad habit, doomscrolling is difficult to kick. But it is not hopeless. So how do you stop Doomscroling? We have some ideas on how you can set yourself up for success.

Understand that this is not your fault

First of all, you are not the problem. The problem is that our lives have become deeply interconnected with technology companies that want to capture our time as much as possible. If I use my Apple Watch to watch a workout, I end up seeing the text messages appear while trying to catch my breath after running a steep hill. If I continue Spotify to hear a particular album, I open the app and immediately see recommendations for podcasts and audiobooks that I don’t usually care about or if I download Snapchat exclusively for a group conversation where my friends send pictures of their pets, then every pet image, It is not strange that our phones make us feel crazy.

I don’t think Mark Zuckerberg sits on his lake – probably in his “metaverse” – dreaming ways to make my life worse. But it is the inherent nature of consumer technology companies that our attention is what keeps them in life and the more we pay attention, the happier their investors are and the prices of shares are increasing and so on. Even with the knowledge of how these companies work, it is still difficult to break our bad habits. I will still open my Instagram account to see what my friend sent me, just to recover my consciousness 10 minutes later, after watching dozens of roles.

Set the time limits of the screen and take them seriously

For the first few years after Apple introduced the screen characteristic on iPhones, I deliberately chose not to activate it – I was afraid of what I could learn about myself. But this fear alone told me that I have a problem. Knowledge is the power and if we know which applications absorb most of our time, then we can limit how much time we spend.

See how you can set screen limits for specific iOS applications:

  • Open the settings app.
  • Move down at the time of the screen, which is marked with an hourglass icon.
  • Here, you can see the daily average hour of your screen and adjust the protective messages for yourself to reduce this average.
  • Below the use of the limit, there are some different ways in which you can reduce your screen time: stopping and applications.
    • Holiday time Defines a program when you can use certain applications. You may adjust the break time for the hours you usually sleep or you may create a more customizable daily program. If you are on Instagram during class too much, it may be time to set a limit.
      • Instead of choosing which applications will be limited during the interruption time, set which applications you want always leavewhich is also accessible to the boundaries of limit. If you have friends and family abroad, for example, you may want to make sure you can always have access to WhatsApp. Or, if you are like me and sometimes you need audiobooks to sleep, then you may allow unlimited libby access.
    • Application limits It is where you can specify how much time you want to spend on some applications a day. You could set individual limits for specific applications, or perhaps connect a class of apps together (Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, Tiktok, X, etc.) and set a total time limit for these applications.

Apple’s built -in display tools are effective, but they are a little easy to bypass. If you are watching a lovely tiktok and suddenly get a pop-up that your time is up, you can simply press a button to give yourself another 15 minutes … and then do the same thing after another 15 minutes pass.

Some people choose to use third -party applications to motivate them to reduce their screen time, which may face possible traps of Apple’s existing functionality.

Here are some applications designed to limit your screen time:

  • VisibleAvailable on iOS and Android, it allows you to create popups that appear before you open certain applications. So before you open Instagram, for example, you can see a 10 second pop-up that says, “is this important?” You can also have the application ask you to take deep breaths before opening applications and plays your success to stay below the time limits. My friend is currently working with a 144 -day series, which they refuse to sacrifice for a quick stroke of bad time dopamine.
  • Opal, available on iOS, Android and tissue, focuses more specifically on enhancing productivity at work or school. The application is more customizable to limiting the screen time than Apple’s built -in features. You can focus not only in times, but also on how often you open an application (eg, you may only want to open the Instagram app three times a day).
  • The roots, available on iOS, are not only focused on how much time you spend on your phone, but also on the quality of that time. Some users particularly love the “Monk” function of the application, which can be activated to make it impossible to bypass any of its application limits – even if you proceed until the application is deleted. But if you were really diligent with your limits, you can unlock “cheat days”.
  • The Touch Grass, available on iOS, does everything that indicates its name: it makes you touch the grass. In order to use some blocked applications, you must literally go out and take a photo of grass. No, the plants in the house will not work. If you want to avoid going out, you can buy a “skip” for a price you set, as low as 99 cents. Half of revenue from omissions goes to support revitalization attempts.

We have rounded up some natural devices that can help you stop looking at the screens too.

So you have opened the Tiktok and the time limits of your screen have refused access, but now you don’t know what to do. You may be on the line in the cafe and you need distraction. And certainly, in an ideal world, we could just get bored without burning spontaneously, but this is not an ideal world.

Here are some other things you can do on your phone that does not include social media:

  • Read a book. No, really. To applications such as iBooks and ReclaimYou can change your settings so you can move to read a book instead of reversing the page per page. Literally scroll, but instead, you might know something.
    • Don’t you want to buy books? You don’t need to! Lumper It is connected to your library card to allow you to access your e -books and audiobooks from your phone.
    • Don’t know what to read? I am very sorry, but you may need to understand it in the booktok.
  • Play games. Sure, games can also be addictive, but at least games will not let you know that people have been destroyed in a new, unexpected way. Each application copies every other application, but in the case of bite size games, once a day, that’s a good thing.
    • THE Games New York Times The app will allow you to quickly play games like Wordle, Strands and Mini Crossword, even if you are not a subscriber. But Gray Lady’s games were so successful that other applications get the bait.
    • Listen to me. The games Linkedin It’s really fun. Sure, you can get to a place from a place from your old, bad boss, but Tango is in particular worth the risk.
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