- An app that blocks distracting sites (I'm using Freedom)
- Change that pattern by changing my habits (e.g. excluding my phone from the morning routine)
Edit: A complete deletion is not really an option since I enjoy Twitter, Reddit, HN to stay up-to-date with the tech world :)
- Blocked reddit at a dns level across my entire network via pihole (I run a personal vlan so the rest of the house network wasn't affected).
- Disable my internet completely on this vlan after working hours via a schedule in pfsense.
I get around the reddit block sometimes by enabling a VPN, which is only a few button clicks. But since this work around causes me extra steps, it makes me pause to think 'do I really want to aimlessly browse reddit?' which the answer is usually no, so I usually stop in my tracks there and get back to work/whatever.
The entire internet being cut was more about configuring a sleep schedule instead of blocking dopamine.
The big take away: make it hard to access the content. The extra step makes you mindful of your time.
For me, there are two primary negative aspects of social media and two "cancellations" (at least partial) to address them:
- The time lost to not even slightly productive content like memes and anime fanart. The solution for me was to cut Reddit out entirely since I was primarily subscribed to such content there. Most of the time that was spent on Reddit is now spent reading books (which at least improve my vocabulary) or watching educational YouTube videos about maths, science, electronics or CNC machining. I consider this problem mostly solved.
- The stress, frustration and hopelessness of participating in online discussions. My solution has been to try and reduce the frequency with which I interact with people on HN and other platforms. When I do interact, I try (not always successfully) to avoid controversial topics and to engage in such a way that the chances of conflict are minimal. For example instead of saying "you should use X", I'd say something like "I'm surprised you're not using X, how come you decided to use Y instead?". This has mostly addressed the problem, when I have issues now it's usually because I made the mistake of commenting on something somewhat controversial (e.g. touching anything to do with COVID).
My personal guidelines (not rules) for Being Online have evolved to something like this:
1. Make things, and talk about the things you make.
2. Contribute ideas that, as far as you can see, would be missing from the world if you specifically didn’t offer them.
3. Spend a lot of time reading other people.
4. Throw points at people you agree with. Upvotes and twitter likes are free. Use dollars, too.
5. If you can’t think of anything to say, go make something tangible worth talking about.
6. Keep your feed weighted towards people who seem to follow these guidelines.
7. Be aware that, absent any truly original ideas, anything you would post with the motive of “being right online” is usually basic and shitty. Filter outbound material with prejudice.
I also removed Facebook and its other brands from the equation, and since those websites are unusable when unlogged, it's even easier to remove the temptation to dwell on them.
For Twitter, I also went to the settings of each person I follow and deactivated the displaying of their retweets, so my timeline (in the chronological mode) consists exclusively of content written by the people I follow.
For instance, I use an extension that adds a 2 second delay to every Facebook page load. The added friction is small but it very quickly gets me frustrated and I just stop.
It's an extension of some typical advice to create healthy habits: make doing the right thing easier and the wrong thing harder.
Twitter and Facebook are too recommendation-intensive for me to use them on a daily basis. I follow a pretty small set of people on Twitter and my feed is still full of "people my followers interact with" and "things I might like". Facebook groups are usually too big for even the group-internal ranking to be very honest, although increasingly I find that going to Facebook for specific groups (similarly to going to reddit for specific subreddits) can be effective (at surfacing memes about new urbanism or Brian Eno).
One trick I used successfully was, remove the apps from your Home Screen so you don’t see them.
Turn off emails, notifications, badge counts, etc so it isn’t constantly reminding you of its existence and is easier to forget.
Don’t leave the tabs open on your computer. There’s probably plug-ins that can shut the tabs after x amount of time.
For mobile, there are app time limit settings (iOS I think has this in the Settings page), intended for parental controls but hey you can use them too.
You don’t have to follow everybody or anybody. When you notice an app, a channel or a certain account is bothering you, consider muting or unfollowing them.
Consider finding other things like games, work, or books that you can absorb your full attention.
Remember, you are the boss. You can use it on your terms. You’ll realize very fast that FOMO does not really exist for these, when you stop using them constantly.
You can do this. You’re gonna feel a lot better on the other side, I guarantee it.
This technique has worked surprisingly well. For myself, the key has been to flip the goal from a negative ("don't check Instagram") to a positive ("get that green check mark").
I'm now off Reddit and Facebook completely. (The fact that I still checked Facebook is baffling, it really was just a reflex to type the URL in the browser.) YouTube and Instagram have been more challenging, but I've made a lot of progress there (went a whole month without checking Instagram). Twitter has been the hardest.
Oh, and definitely don't have any of the apps on your phone.
It's a pain in the ass, but...
I also curate and engage in a list of other "hobbies" that can easily distract me from the various (anti-)social networks. I'm teaching myself Python coding (by writing tools to organize and consume my various information and data sources in healthier ways, and Blender 3D (because I've always been fascinated by 3D graphics in games, movies, and TV), and Godot game engine (because it goes nicely hand-in-hand with Blender 3D when I want to bring some "life" and interactivity to my 3D models (more than achieved by simple linear animation can provide). When I catch myself on any of my informational feeds, I tend to start to naturally gravitate toward information about those hobbies which tends to lead me inevitably back into those tools to experiment with some newly found knowledge on the topic. This allows me to more easily and frequently ignore things that tend to lean more toward the "wasted time" side of the equation.
Also why would I block a website if reading it is what I enjoy? Won't this just make me less happy?
I personally am blessed to have zero interest in Facebook and Instagram but I procrastinate a huge lot (seemingly way more than I should) by reading HN. But this also is my primary channel through which I get useful knowledge (more than half of which, picked by my attention, is unrelated or loosely related to IT) and most of the idea about what's going on outside of my home and office. Should I block HN?
- Facebook: I realized everything I posted got maybe 1 or 2 likes. Either no one was looking at my stuff or the algorithm wasn't propagating it. At the time I had 150 friends, so I would have expected more response out of most of my posts than that. Thus I was just giving Facebook info about myself and that it really was a waste of my time.
- Most social media apps: It's so easy to get caught up in the hope that your stuff goes viral, but understanding the above and really thinking about how things go viral (essentially purely random or so plugged into a developing zeitgeist that you stumble upon it), the chance of that happening is so small that your efforts are honestly better spent elsewhere. Even if it does happen, what's the reward. What's the true value of merely being Internet famous? Is it worth posting multiple times daily and being consumed with the reactions? Most worthwhile Internet famous people have lives and value beyond their social media posts.
After really realizing this social media became mostly pointless to me and I wasn't doing social media instead of more important things in my life.
If you are getting a lot of meaningful engagement with your posts, then maybe it's a value-add and you shouldn't stop. Otherwise maybe taking a 1-week break and seeing if anything significant in your life changes will put it into proper perspective.
1. Only permit important notifications
2. Avoid mobile apps like a plague
3. Avoid apps that have dark patterns like deep scrolling
4. Use simple alternatives when available. I use NewPipe instead of YouTube and i.reddit.com in place of reddit.com
5. I know that my time and attention are valuable. There's no reason I should give it to these companies.
6. Use app specific hacks. For example, it's not possible for me to avoid LinkedIn as I am looking for jobs. But instead of routinely browsing it I can just configure daily alerts.
That ways you can’t just log in every time you crave a hit for a day.
Think of this like an alcoholic who always carries a flask — getting rid of the flask could be a good first-step in controlling the addiction.
If you don't delete the app, really really cut back on your subscriptions/follows to just the essentials. The less content, the less time you spend doomscrolling.
Also, on platforms like Twitter, I turn of retweets. I only see tweets directly tweeted by people I follow.
Between those two things, my Instagram usage is down from 1+ hours a day to ~10m.
Part of that is because the ig webapp is pretty terrible, so it won’t work for hn.
Get lots of sleep, meditate, and eat well, as this helps.
See also the Huberman lab podcast on dopamine for more ideas.
Anyway, my response to your question would be to forget all the tech. Just figure out how to manage your energy. Maybe plan mental breaks from your work, maybe check your sleep hygiene. And finally, and maybe this is just me trying to justify my own behavior, it could be that the refreshing is just the kind of dumb activity your brain needs to catch a break and regain some energy.
The fact that it has no icons also helps, it makes it far more arduous to open apps that you might not use a ton or that you don't have a shortcut for in your home screen menu so you tend to start ignoring a lot of little time sinks.
> Most people don't live aware lives. They live mechanical lives, mechanical thoughts - generally somebody else's - mechanical emotions, mechanical actions, mechanical reactions.
> Do you want to see how mechanical you really are? "My, that's a lovely shirt you're wearing". You feel good hearing that. For a shirt, for heaven's sake! You feel proud of yourself when you hear that.
> Normally the way it goes, I press a button and you're up; I press another button and you're down.
On social media we let others push the up/down buttons - and we feel happy, sad, proud, ashamed from that
I don't do this for HN, but for a couple of the bigger platforms where I'm fascinated by the activity but get cranky if I participate too much.
I wish HN would do account deletion the same way Reddit does. They argue it would harm the flow of conversations, but I'd argue the conversations here aren't a sacred as they make them out to be.
Just denying myself access to the account isn't the same, I tried it and had to ask support to give it back. I don't like to have 11 years of content sitting out there that's tied to me that I can't control in anyway (account used to be my real name, but support changed it after a minor stalking incident, but there's enough data for figuring it out).
I blocked myself from checking any news sites or social media from my phone, only desktop. That way I don't get stuck in bed or delay wind down.
The key takeaway from the book for me was that abstinence is necessary and withdrawal is part of getting better. I have tried all kinds of tools and tricks to avoid gaming before, but learning "why" it's happening has been the key to actually succeed.
I stopped using any "Meta" products, turned off notifications on my phone for anything else, and have screen time limits (though Apple's screen time is much less effective than Android, for some reason). I keep my phone in another room at night.
I find now that once I spend a small amount of time on social media (even HN) I start noticing a kind of gross, anxious feeling that leads me to pause.
There is no shortage of book recommendations. I usually get them from people interviewed on podcasts.
Also, kindle is my go-to Twitter replacement.
I am not capable of moderate game playing, so I have no games installed on any device of mine.