{"id":357740,"date":"2026-04-01T01:07:11","date_gmt":"2026-04-01T01:07:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/357740\/"},"modified":"2026-04-01T01:07:11","modified_gmt":"2026-04-01T01:07:11","slug":"why-some-young-people-are-ditching-their-smartphones-for-dumbphones-flip-phones","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/357740\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Some Young People Are Ditching Their Smartphones for Dumbphones, Flip Phones"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\tYou&#8217;re Offline! <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/sun-icon.svg\" alt=\"sun icon\"\/> <\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-1m2nhzs\">Smartphones are endlessly distracting.<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-1m2nhzs\">Delivering a constant stream of messages, entertainment, news, alerts and more.<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-1m2nhzs\">Now, some young people who were raised with these devices are deciding to get rid of them. They want to know \u2026<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_social.svg\" alt=\"social icon\"\/>   <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_social.svg\" alt=\"social icon\"\/>   <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_social.svg\" alt=\"social icon\"\/> <\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Justin messaged: Wow this\u2026<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_reminder.svg\" alt=\"reminder icon\"\/>   <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_message.svg\" alt=\"message icon\"\/> Mom<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">I sent you a video did you get it<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_gift.svg\" alt=\"gift icon\"\/> We\u2019ve missed you!<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Use the code WELCOMEBACK5 for 5% off your next purchase<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_food.svg\" alt=\"food icon\"\/> Delivery<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Hungry? This one\u2019s on us! Get $2 off your next\u2026<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_news.svg\" alt=\"news icon\"\/> BREAKING NEWS<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Panda at local zoo finds meaning<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-dpi5o0\">Editor\u2019s note: These pop-ups are annoying aren\u2019t they? To get rid of them, simply disable your Wi-Fi and put your device in airplane mode.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_pricetracking.svg\" alt=\"pricetracking icon\"\/> Price Drop<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Multiple items in your cart are now available at a lower price.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_astrology.svg\" alt=\"astrology icon\"\/> Astrology<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">You should get out more.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_message.svg\" alt=\"message icon\"\/>   <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_reminder.svg\" alt=\"reminder icon\"\/> Reminder<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Pick up Bon Bon from the groomer<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">For most of his childhood, Shaawan Francis Keahna considered himself to be a fundamentally unattractive kid \u2014 \u201ctoo giggly and too gangly and too smart,\u201d as he put it to me recently, \u201cwith a face that was really, really adult, despite my youth. My biggest problem, of course, was that I was just plain weird.\u201d Growing up in Hayward, a former logging town on the Namekagon River in northwestern Wisconsin, he was often teased by white classmates for his Native ancestry and for his love of poetry and art. \u201cIt became a self-fulfilling thing,\u201d he said. \u201cI internalized it and basically came to see myself exactly the way they saw me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Then in 2014, shortly before his 17th birthday, Keahna persuaded his mother to buy him a smartphone, and practically overnight everything changed. Huddled in his bedroom, his face lit by the glow of the device\u2019s screen, Keahna spent hours clicking around Rookie, an online magazine founded by the writer Tavi Gevinson, and Tumblr, a microblogging site popular with teenagers and 20-somethings. Eventually he opened his own Tumblr account, which he populated with poetry and moodily posed selfies. Hundreds of likes and comments followed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">\u201cI went from thinking I had nothing going for me, IRL, to the empowerment of being attractive to college students and getting scouted by modeling agencies,\u201d he wrote in an email. \u201cI was being shown a world where my appearance could offer me everything, right in the palm of my hand. And I was ready to do whatever it took to jump from the old world to the new.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Although he was not yet aware of it, Keahna had joined one of the largest technological migrations in American history. From 2011 to 2012 alone, according to data from the Pew Research Center, the number of American teenagers with access to a smartphone <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pewresearch.org\/internet\/2013\/03\/13\/main-findings-5\/)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">jumped to 37 percent<\/a> of the population from 23 percent; by the time Keahna graduated from high school in 2016, he knew hardly anyone without an internet-capable device. \u201cBut I would argue that I was unique even among my friends,\u201d he told me. \u201cPeople would joke, \u2018Wow, you are in an unhealthy, long-term, abusive, romantic love affair with your phone.\u2019 And it was true.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">He became especially addicted to Instagram, where he would often post upward of 50 \u201cstories\u201d a day. In the artistic and activist circles in which he now moved, trading handles was the equivalent of sending a \u201csocial r\u00e9sum\u00e9,\u201d he said. \u201cLike, \u2018Oh, you were written up here,\u2019 or \u2018Oh, you made this animation.\u2019 It was my portfolio \u2014 a history of where I\u2019d been and who I was.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">And yet as he edged further into his 20s and moved to Baltimore to pursue a career in writing and filmmaking, Keahna found himself increasingly uneasy with the outsize role his phone was playing in his life. The moment he felt sad, or scared, or uneasy, or bored, his hand would shoot instinctively, Gollum-like, toward the device. He scrolled while he walked, while he lay in bed; he scrolled while talking with friends. This, he felt, was bad enough, but not nearly as bad as the accompanying guilt. \u201cI remember being sent a photo from a big family vacation to Montana,\u201d he said. \u201cI have my little niece on my lap, and there are all these mountains behind us, and it\u2019s absolutely gorgeous,\u201d he went on, his eyes shiny with tears. \u201cAnd there\u2019s me, slouched over, looking at my smartphone. I couldn\u2019t remember being in that moment, because I was transfixed by the screen. I realized that I had given a part of myself away.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">In a frantic effort to get it back, he experimented with locking his device in a different room and deleting certain applications. Later he began lurking on a Reddit forum called r\/dumbphones, where users post tips and pictures of stripped-down devices capable of sending texts and making calls and little else. \u201cInevitably,\u201d Keahna said, \u201cthat triggered the Instagram algorithm to send me videos of influencers saying, like, \u2018Yeah, it\u2019s time to give up your smartphone.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_message.svg\" alt=\"message icon\"\/> Mom<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">I don\u2019t think my messages are going through\u2026<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">To his astonishment, many of these voices appeared to belong to people close to his own age. In some cases, they were younger still, meaning they were unlikely to be able to remember a time when the smartphone wasn\u2019t the primary portal through which their generation experienced life \u2014 equal parts wallet and communication platform, portable encyclopedia and gaming platform. And yet all of them seemed to be awakening to an alarming truth: that however their pocket computer may have benefited them, and however deeply embedded it was in their day-to-day existence, it had also proved to be something of a Pandora\u2019s box, unleashing a tide of horrors they desperately wanted to escape.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">This year, I set out to better understand what was driving this shift \u2014 what was causing so many young people to feel fed up with their phones. In dozens of interviews, and hours spent on internet message boards like r\/dumbphones, where I first met Keahna, I often heard variations on the same metaphors \u2014 a shattering, a wave, an explosion. But the most common refrain involved the language of illness. \u201cMy opinion is that the human body, thanks to millions of years of evolution and developing these feedback mechanisms, is good at knowing when it\u2019s sick,\u201d one 20-something told me recently. \u201cAnd there are a lot more young people who are suddenly at their wits\u2019 end. They say: \u2018Oh, my god, why am I still interested in this thing? I want to throw it in the river.\u2019 They know, their bodies know, that they\u2019re burned out, they\u2019re gassed \u2014 and that they\u2019re ready for something different.\u201d Keahna, for his part, was more succinct. \u201cIt does feel,\u201d he told me, \u201clike a collective fever is breaking.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">But as he quickly discovered, it is one thing to be aware of a problem and another to address it. You can be sick and still not be willing to take the cure. No matter how much time he spent on r\/dumbphones, no matter how many social media apps he deleted, his phone always ended up back in his hands. \u201cIt remains distressing to me how much giving it up was like trying to get off drugs,\u201d he said. \u201cIt felt close to impossible. And ultimately, the only thing that helped was someone showing me that it wasn\u2019t.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">One evening, Keahna attended a rock show at an underground venue in Baltimore, where he summoned the courage to introduce himself to Alexandra Zavaglia, a local musician and performer. At 26, Zavaglia was already an established figure in the city\u2019s art scene \u2014 under the name Cassiopeia, she fronted a local death-metal band \u2014 and seemed to know everyone worth knowing. \u201cAnd when I asked her for social info,\u201d Keahna said, \u201cshe pulled out a business card and a flip phone.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">He recognized the technology from his childhood, but it had been years since he\u2019d seen it in the wild, and certainly not in the hands of someone so demonstrably cool. Zavaglia \u201cwas my age,\u201d Keahna said. \u201cShe had an active social life, an active work schedule, a creative career. And she was doing it all while being far more offline than me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">A couple of months later, Keahna signed in to eBay and bought a dumbphone of his own. If in high school he had been part of the great smartphone migration, now, nearly 20 years after the release of the original Apple iPhone, he was joining its inverse: a growing and passionate resistance movement of young users who had decided that they deserved, collectively, to be set free.<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-wmexu8\">The Pew Research Center, which put teenage smartphone access at 37 percent in 2012, had it at 95 percent in 2024<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_games.svg\" alt=\"games icon\"\/> Games<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">You haven\u2019t played in 3 days! We miss you! Come back!<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_reminder.svg\" alt=\"reminder icon\"\/> Reminders<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Did you take your creatine today?<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_email.svg\" alt=\"email icon\"\/>   <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_dating.svg\" alt=\"dating icon\"\/> Find Love<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">It\u2019s not them\u2014it\u2019s you.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">A stipulation: The age of the smartphone is not ending, not any time soon, and not least because the multibillion-dollar smartphone industry has a vested interest in ensuring that it continues. The Pew Research Center, which put teenage smartphone access at 37 percent in 2012, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pewresearch.org\/internet\/fact-sheet\/teens-and-internet-device-access-fact-sheet\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">had it at 95 percent in 2024<\/a>, and young adults \u2014 defined as anyone between the ages of 18 and 29 \u2014 consistently rank as the most active of all internet users. As of a few years ago, Gallup found that the average teenager in the United States spent about <a href=\"https:\/\/news.gallup.com\/poll\/512576\/teens-spend-average-hours-social-media-per-day.aspx\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">4.8 hours a day on social media sites<\/a>, with much of that screen time occurring, according to other research, during school hours.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">And yet it seems simultaneously clear that when it comes to all smartphone users, including members of older generations but particularly those users raised on a smart device, a major reckoning is finally at hand. Since 2023, <a href=\"https:\/\/abcnews.com\/Politics\/states-banning-cellphones-schools\/story?id=125515186\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">more than 30 states<\/a> have instituted partial smartphone restrictions or so-called bell-to-bell bans that forbid the use of smartphones when school is in session. Overseas, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2025\/12\/09\/world\/asia\/australia-social-media-ban-under-16.html\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Australia\u2019s government has gone so far as to ban social media<\/a> for children under 16. (More than half a dozen countries are considering similar measures.) And in Silicon Valley, tech titans like Meta, Google and Snap are facing a barrage of lawsuits \u2014 thousands in all \u2014 <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/03\/25\/technology\/social-media-trial-verdict.html\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">accusing them<\/a> of deliberately preying upon vulnerable kids. \u201cThese companies built machines designed to addict the brains of children,\u201d Mark Lanier, a plaintiff\u2019s attorney, has said in a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/03\/25\/technology\/social-media-trial-verdict.html\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">case against Meta and YouTube<\/a>. \u201cAnd they did it on purpose.\u201d (A jury found both companies negligent.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">At the same time, what was once a steady drip of academic literature on the dangers of the smartphone has widened into a torrent. In recent years, for example, we have learned that smartphone use <a href=\"https:\/\/pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\/articles\/PMC11794190\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">can lead to disturbances<\/a> in \u201cmultiple cellular biological processes\u201d in adolescents, while prolonged screen time may negatively affect parts of young brains that govern decision-making and impulse control. We have been told that people who receive a smartphone before age 13 experience higher levels of \u201cdetachment from reality\u201d and diminished self-worth, and that heavy use can lead to cognitive impairment, obesity and <a href=\"https:\/\/pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\/articles\/PMC12542440\/).\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">hand pain<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">These effects have inspired books like \u201cThe Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness,\u201d by the New York University professor <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/01\/16\/podcasts\/jonathan-haidt-new-evidence.html\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Jonathan Haidt<\/a>, whose central thesis \u2014 that children have been unwillingly recruited as \u201ctest subjects for a radical new way of growing up, far from the real-world interactions of small communities in which humans evolved\u201d \u2014 has been adopted as a rallying cry by parents everywhere.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_email.svg\" alt=\"email icon\"\/>  <\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">In 2025, Madeleine George, a public-health expert at RTI International, an independent research group, helped conduct a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sciencedirect.com\/science\/article\/pii\/S2666560325000714\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">meta-analysis of 32 studies<\/a> on the relationship between social media restriction and well-being. The upshot, she told me, was that staying offline yields \u201csmall but consistent positive effects.\u201d She emphasized that the overall findings \u201cmasked a lot of variability\u201d \u2014 many young people are able to enjoy a reasonably healthy relationship with their phone.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Still, many others find that \u201cthey feel awful,\u201d she said, and may even be influenced by the heightened awareness of the damage smartphones can inflict. \u201cHearing those sorts of messages, it absolutely seeps in \u2014 it gets absorbed,\u201d George told me. \u201cAnd kids start to say, \u2018I need to break out of this cage they\u2019ve put us in.\u2019 That\u2019s really at the heart of what\u2019s going on here, right? They\u2019re saying: \u2018How can I maximize what I want out of this technology and minimize what I don\u2019t want? I should get to have a choice in the matter.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">We\u2019ve been here before, of course. With few exceptions, every piece of transformative technology has inspired a backlash. It happened with the car, when city dwellers mobilized against what they viewed as a noisy, smelly, dangerous menace. It happened with the television, and the widespread fear that it would damage viewers\u2019 brains. And it is happening now, with artificial intelligence. \u201cThere\u2019s a misconception that technology moves in a straight line \u2014 that it\u2019s this big, clean wave, with everything being carried constantly forward,\u201d said Thomas Dekeyser, an academic and author of a new book called \u201cTechno-Negative: A Long History of Refusing the Machine.\u201d \u201cBut when you look more closely, you find it\u2019s not true. There has always been contestation. There has always been a point when people stand up and resist.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">The difference today, he continued, is the age of those doing the resisting. \u201cUsually it\u2019s the older generations who say things like, \u2018I want the youth I had, and that is no longer there,\u2019\u201d he told me. \u201cWhereas now, with the smartphone and social media, it\u2019s the younger generations going: \u2018Yeah, no thanks. I don\u2019t want this in the present \u2014 nor in the future.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">You can find variations on the sentiment in any venue, digital or not, where teenagers and 20-somethings congregate. On TikTok, clips promoting the \u201cflip-phone lifestyle\u201d have been viewed hundreds of millions of times; on YouTube, an army of young dumbphone evangelists preaches the brain-improving benefits of going analog. There are \u201cLuddite clubs\u201d at high schools around the country, and on college campuses, a phone-free campaign called the Reconnect Movement \u2014 tagline: \u201cWe\u2019re all craving something real\u201d \u2014 has attracted enthusiastic audiences.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">When ThriftBooks commissioned Talker Research <a href=\"https:\/\/talkerresearch.com\/survey-reveals-intentional-digital-disconnection-growing-among-americans\/)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">to survey 2,000 people<\/a> on their relationship with their devices, half said they wanted more distance from their screens. But the numbers were skewed by age: The younger the user, the likelier she was to actually carve out blocks of phone-free time on a daily basis. Another poll, funded by a telecommunications firm, yielded similar results \u2014 more than half of Generation Z respondents had experimented with so-called digital detoxing, compared with 20 percent of baby boomers.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">\u201cI\u2019ve noticed that I can\u2019t so much as wait for the elevator without scrolling through TikTok,\u201d said Ben Lichtenstein, 24, a music manager who has experimented with deleting apps from his phone. \u201cIt\u2019s the best distraction. It makes the time pass. But more and more, I\u2019m like: Why do we want the time to pass? If I have 15 minutes and I waste it on watching content, and it feels like it went by in 30 seconds, I\u2019m shortening my life. The way I\u2019d put it is: The smartphone has never been more helpful and never more harmful.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Chances are, you know exactly what he is talking about, even if you\u2019ve long since aged out of your 20s. One consequence of having the world at your fingertips is that you are conversely (and constantly) at the world\u2019s fingertips \u2014 always a notification away from being sucked into the endless scroll. Try sitting at a bar and doing nothing but drinking your beer. Try standing in line and staring at the floor. Try sitting in the waiting room at a doctor\u2019s office and listening to the bland thrum of the music. Can you do it?<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Not long ago, Dekeyser held a talk at a university in London. After the event wound down, he was swarmed by young attendees who wanted his advice on quitting their phones. \u201cI said: \u2018To start with, I want to say how hard it must be,\u2019\u201d he recalled. \u201c\u2018You\u2019ve grown up with these things.\u2019\u201d Before he started teaching, he worked in digital marketing. He knew \u201cthe extent to which devices and apps are designed to make you addicted. And so the other thing I said was: \u2018It\u2019s not your fault if you fail at this. Because it\u2019s not limited to what you, as an individual, want. You\u2019re trying to push back against forces that want you hooked.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Dekeyser said he came away inspired by the \u201cenergy and passion\u201d of the young dissenters. He was less sanguine on the question of whether they would be successful. \u201cOn my more pessimistic days, I think about how good big tech can be at pretending to address an issue while continuing to push as hard as they can on their central aims,\u201d he told me. \u201cBut on my optimistic days, I look at the loads of people embracing this attitude, and I feel like this is the moment where things might be galvanizing into a significant social movement.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-wmexu8\">The average teenager in the United States spent about 4.8 hours a day on social media sites<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_music.svg\" alt=\"music icon\"\/> Free Trial<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Your free trial is about to expire. Act fast before you lose access.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_dating.svg\" alt=\"dating icon\"\/>   <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_news.svg\" alt=\"news icon\"\/> BREAKING NEWS<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">These parasitic worms have\u2026<\/p>\n<p>   Song <\/p>\n<p class=\"g-leadin svelte-ork8ht\">Charlie Poole and The North Carolina Ramblers Group<\/p>\n<p>     Music<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Omar shared this track with you.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">In 2018, shortly after graduating from college, Austin Boer moved to the Chinese port city of Fuzhou, where he was joined by a fraternity brother, Brennan Jordan. During the week they taught English, and on weekends and breaks they crisscrossed Asia by train and plane and car. \u201cOne thing that kept coming up in our conversations was our desire to distance ourselves from the apps, like Instagram, that we felt were pulling us away from really experiencing these beautiful cultures,\u201d Boer told me. \u201cBut there was so much we needed from our phones \u2014 we needed to be able to get in touch with our families if there was an emergency.\u201d They also needed reliable translation apps, and Google Maps, and access to WeChat Pay, the ubiquitous Chinese payment platform.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Soon the two friends began discussing the possibility of creating a \u201ctweener device\u201d that would retain some of the vital functions of a smartphone while stripping away unnecessary clutter. \u201cFor us,\u201d Jordan recalled, \u201cit was a matter of taking this thing that started as a tool and became an entertainment device and figuring out a way to turn it back into a tool.\u201d A few years later, with the assistance of a cadre of professional programmers, they released the Sleke, a refurbished Google Pixel 7 smartphone running a custom operating system they called OdysseyOS. (The name is a reference to Homer\u2019s epic: \u201cJust like Odysseus\u2019 crew who bound him to the mast,\u201d the description on the Sleke website reads, \u201cwe\u2019re here to help you resist the Sirens of distraction.\u201d) They have since sold hundreds of the gadgets and are considering creating a second phone for elementary school students, as well as one for older users.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">The challenge for them, and for the Sleke, is that in the gap between initial epiphany and the release of the device, the market for alternatives to the full-featured smartphone became extremely crowded. Jordan and Boer no longer have the field to themselves. \u201cI\u2019ve watched it grow into a really diverse spectrum of options,\u201d Jordan acknowledged to me.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">On one end of that spectrum are the true dumbphones of the sort sold by the Finnish company Human Mobile Devices, the licensee of the Nokia name. On the other are so-called distraction-blocker apps that run on traditional smartphones: Brick, Freedom, AppBlock and Brainrot, which was created by the 27-year-old software engineer Yoni Smolyar and boasts as its most notable feature a cartoon cranium that literally disintegrates the longer the user spends online. And somewhere in the middle are devices like the Light Phone III, a beautifully designed, dumbphone-adjacent matte box equipped with a decent camera, a pared-down mapping application and a rudimentary music player.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_astrology.svg\" alt=\"astrology icon\"\/> Astrology<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Maybe you\u2019re the problem.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">But there are spectra within spectra: Many young users, unable to fully step away from their smartphone, prefer to periodically delete social media software in an attempt at digital detox or leverage an accessibility feature that renders onscreen images in shades of gray \u2014 the idea being that the more boring their device appears, the less they\u2019ll be inclined to engage with it. Alternatively, they can alter a dumbphone to run stripped-down versions of certain apps. When I spoke with Jojo Jones, a 27-year-old playwright from Brooklyn, she held up her flip phone, which she bought on eBay for about $60 and modified with help from other users on various dumbphone forums. \u201cYou can see I\u2019ve got a version of Lyft on there, plus Apple Music,\u201d she said, rolling her thumb across the arrow keys. \u201cYou move around a little cursor to get to the right song.\u201d The Lyft app, she admitted, didn\u2019t really work.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Jones said she was initially daunted by the learning curve required to get her device up and running: She had to connect the phone to a laptop and download a bewildering variety of software. But she discovered that she enjoyed the process \u2014 in Silicon Valley terms, the friction was a feature, not a bug. She began thinking more deeply about how the rest of the world used phones, and why, and what aspects were truly important to her. Over time, she found that her relationship to technology writ large had been reset. Sometimes she uses her laptop for video chats with her fianc\u00e9 in London. And her smartphone is still incorporated into her life. \u201cSo I might say, \u2018Oh, I miss taking pictures,\u2019\u201d she said. \u201cOr, \u2018I want to check Instagram.\u2019 I can still do that. But I do just that, and then I\u2019m done with it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Last year, researchers at Stanford University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison convened a group of approximately 150 students, a subset of whom expressed interested in ditching their smartphones \u2014 the \u201cdumbphone curious,\u201d let\u2019s call them \u2014 and a subset who expressed no strong feelings about the technology one way or another. All the members of the first group were asked to trade in their smartphones for Light Phones; roughly half of the second group did the same. (The rest got to hang on to their personal devices.) Over the course of a week, participants filled out regular surveys on their well-being and the volume of their internet use.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_music.svg\" alt=\"music icon\"\/> Music<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">New chill vibes playlist released<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">The results, which will be published in a paper next month, were striking: The motivated users, the authors conclude, \u201cshowed significant changes in psychological well-being\u201d after adopting the Light Phone. They were less stressed and reported greater levels of \u201clife satisfaction.\u201d They weren\u2019t on their phones as much; their dependency decreased. But the opposite was true for the randomly recruited subset. That group seemed to glean no upside from switching to a Light Phone. Their stress levels remained static, and their life-satisfaction levels declined.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">\u201cThe takeaway,\u201d said Anja Stevic, an author of the paper, \u201cis that if you have high interest and you know you want to pursue a smartphone alternative, it could work out for you. It could help you. It\u2019s almost a logical outcome, I\u2019d say.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">This may explain why many young people, upon taking the inherently huge step of buying a dumbphone, seem only rarely to report going back to their smartphones. \u201cFor me, at the outset, it was a science experiment almost: How long can I live in a universe of smartphones without depending on a smartphone myself?\u201d Alexandra Zavaglia told me. \u201cNow I\u2019m a few years in, and all of that has faded. It\u2019s the reverse: It\u2019s tough to imagine life with a smartphone.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">But the Stanford paper \u2014 the title is \u201cGoing Light\u201d \u2014 is as much a cautionary tale about the potential limits of widespread dumbphone adoption as it is about the phones\u2019 amelioratory effects. Many of us, simply put, are resistant to the radicalness of the change and are worried \u2014 rightfully, I\u2019d argue \u2014 about its repercussions in a world that is designed around the smartphone. After all, it\u2019s one thing to toss your smartphone in the trash and another to realize that you have to dig it out again if you want to attend a concert for which all the tickets are issued electronically.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Smartphones make it easier for us to get on a train, track our workouts, snap photographs and videos on vacation, pay for a sandwich without carting around a wallet or engage in a group chat. (Several times in my research, I was regaled with tales of missing messages about upcoming gatherings or birthday parties.) And this is to say nothing of mapping software, without which many of us would start to feel quite literally lost, or the demands of the modern workplace, with its unspoken rule that employees should be available around the clock \u2014 on Slack and email.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">\u201cI can\u2019t tell you how badly I wish I could switch to a dumbphone,\u201d said Ben Lichtenstein, the music manager, who recently abandoned yet another experiment with social media app deletion. \u201cBut every single time I\u2019ve made an effort to cut down on smartphone usage, it has come back to bite me. A client has gotten upset that I\u2019m not available, or I\u2019ve missed out on discovering a new artist on Instagram. I\u2019ve realized I simply don\u2019t have the luxury.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Dumbphone enthusiasts are not blind to this argument, which is why many of them were so careful to stipulate to me that they were able to \u201cgo dumb\u201d only because they didn\u2019t do much driving, or maintained a flexible work schedule, or had realized they didn\u2019t care that much about group texts anyway. \u201cIt\u2019s not for everyone, and I get that,\u201d Zavaglia told me. Still, she said, she suspected that most people were likely to discover that \u201cthe societal pressure to be constantly online does fade. Slowly but surely, you learn that you\u2019re just fine without your smartphone.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">I knew exactly what she meant. Last year, having concluded that staring at my phone before going to sleep was not making me a better or happier person, I started turning on Do Not Disturb around 8:30 p.m.; within a month, I was powering down the device entirely and tucking it into a drawer in my office on the other side of the house. What made the second step possible is what I learned through the first: I wasn\u2019t really missing anything. There were no grand emergencies to be reckoned with, no news notifications so important that I couldn\u2019t read them in the morning. Contrary to what my lizard brain told me, I didn\u2019t need the outside world forever flickering through my eyeballs, and the outside world didn\u2019t need me, either.<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-wmexu8\">Many young people, upon taking the inherently huge step of buying a dumbphone, seem only rarely to report going back to their smartphones.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_email.svg\" alt=\"email icon\"\/> Pamela<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Can you please CC me in the future.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_sleep.svg\" alt=\"sleep icon\"\/> Reminder<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">Go to bed by 4:30pm to get a full 16 hours of sleep<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_pricetracking.svg\" alt=\"pricetracking icon\"\/> Budget<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">You are $200 over on delivery this month. We\u2019ve updated your\u2026.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_photos.svg\" alt=\"photos icon\"\/> Photos<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">3 years ago today you were in Hawaii.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">When Shaawan Francis Keahna was young, he spent a lot of time reading fantasy and sci-fi novels, many of which took place in universes where the entire populace had been pacified by the ruling class. \u201cEveryone was, unwittingly, under a spell,\u201d he told me. As a kid, he found the premise implausible. \u201cNow I\u2019ll walk around, and everyone is on their smartphones all the time \u2014 when they\u2019re driving, when they\u2019re with kids,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s like: Wow. Everybody is so [expletive] up, and they don\u2019t know it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Which is not to say the process of weaning himself off his phone has been without difficulties: It\u2019s still a hassle to navigate his way through an unfamiliar city, to fish out a physical subway card when all the other commuters around him were using smartphone apps. And in certain social situations, he sometimes feels barely visible. \u201cI\u2019ve re-met people from the film industry,\u201d he said, \u201cor the literary world, and they\u2019re talking to me as if we\u2019ve just been introduced, as if me having no social media has wiped their memory of me. That can be surreal.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_email.svg\" alt=\"email icon\"\/>  <\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Still, it\u2019s a trade-off he is willing to accept. \u201cI\u2019ve changed as a person,\u201d he told me. \u201cI\u2019m more content. I\u2019m much more measured and less reactive. I\u2019m not as plugged in to online hot takes and the dumb brevity that kind of rules our world right now. I think I\u2019ve gotten far more willing to admit when I\u2019m wrong. I think I\u2019m more willing to just, I don\u2019t know, talk to people. I\u2019m less paranoid and less judgmental and no longer overanalyzing every micro-interaction for some sign of why this person did not follow me back on social media.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">In recent months, he said, he has been approached by several friends who have reached their own breaking points with their phones. \u201cIt\u2019s a topic of conversation for every member of my social circles,\u201d he told me. \u201cEven the people you wouldn\u2019t expect. I have this friend who\u2019s incredibly shallow and reactionary and mean \u2014 I love her as a person, but that\u2019s just who she is. Even she\u2019s saying: \u2018Oh, yeah, the smartphone is bad. It\u2019s bad\u2019\u201d \u2014 here he paused for effect \u2014 \u201c\u2018but I have to use it, because I\u2019m a model.\u2019 Everybody has a reason: I need to know what\u2019s going on, or I need to find someone, or I need to be found. I need to be found and remembered.\u201d His task, as he sees it, is to show them they don\u2019t, at least not in the way they\u2019ve been taught to think.<\/p>\n<p>  <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static01.nytimes.com\/newsgraphics\/urboxBxqBroqKA\/_big_assets.oVvHgGMqteGRYI9rDPkCdbyoHJAZMsJNa5GOpVl9HkQ\/icons\/notification_icon_book.svg\" alt=\"book icon\"\/> Reading<\/p>\n<p class=\"svelte-ccejm9\">You\u2019ve met your reading goal<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Matthew Shaer is a contributing writer for the magazine and the host of the podcast Origin Stories.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text g-body-text svelte-kxgec5 g-text_last\">Videos: Eza\/Adobe Stock; Don Hammond\/Getty; blackboxguild\/Adobe Stock; AliceCam\/Adobe Stock; Pavel Losevsky\/Adobe Stock; Andrii Kobryn\/Adobe Stock; Oninpunch\/Adobe Stock; Frozen Ant Films\/Adobe Stock; Lathe Poland\/Adobe Stock; Khanoglu\/Creatas Video, via Getty images; Neil Bromhall\/Oxford Scientific Video, via Getty images.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"You&#8217;re Offline! Smartphones are endlessly distracting. Delivering a constant stream of messages, entertainment, news, alerts and more. Now,&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":357741,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[16],"tags":[71432,342,42358,111,139,69,871,1414,145,1079],"class_list":{"0":"post-357740","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-mobile","8":"tag-anxiety-and-stress","9":"tag-mobile","10":"tag-mobile-applications","11":"tag-new-zealand","12":"tag-newzealand","13":"tag-nz","14":"tag-smartphones","15":"tag-social-media","16":"tag-technology","17":"tag-youth"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/357740","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=357740"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/357740\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/357741"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=357740"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=357740"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=357740"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}