Bloomberg Businessweek (North America)

Survey: We asked plugged-in people how they unplug. Only one threw his phone into the ocean

How do you unplug?

- By Katie Morell

“My family has been going to a lake cabin around the Fourth of July for almost 20 years. We don’t have cell reception except at the top of a huge hill. One year I was pitching a large client and needed to participat­e in a conference call, so I went to the top of the hill and had hourslong conversati­ons in 95- degree heat, with mosquitoes, biting horseflies, cicadas buzzing, sweat coming out of everywhere, and red-winged blackbirds divebombin­g me. Now if I really have to be online, I drive into town and find a truck stop that has Wi-fi.”

Todd Labeau Senior vice president for digital digitalmar­ketingmark­eting and social media, Lindsay, Stone & Briggs

“I had a period of about six weeks when I was overseeing several campaigns all launching at the same time. I was attached to my phone 24/7, and it was constantly blowing up. One morning I woke up to hundreds of e- e-mails mails and felt like I couldn’t turn off my phone, so I put it— screen facing away from me— on my windshield under my wiper blades and drove to work. I knew the e-mailse- mails wouldn’t go away, but for the 20 minutes of my commute, I felt better.”

Thom Gruhler Corporate vice president for apps and services, Microsoft

“I went to Bali and wanted to decompress, so I asked the front desk to lock up my iphone and Blackberry in the safe during my stay. It was very hard at first, but after a few days I got used to it. Somehow, it shifted my perspectiv­e away from always being connected and distracted to being able to focus on relaxing— relaxing—a a new thing for me.”

Sonita Lontoh Vice president for marketing, Siemens Digital Grid

““I I was on vacation in Greece aboard a yacht and found myself answering three business calls and 10 texts per day. This didn’t bother me until one day a client threw a hissy fit. I was so annoyed, I punted my phone off the back of the boat. It felt so liberating.”

Curtis Boyd Acting chief executive officer, Future Solutions Media

“I was in Italy with my then-boyfriend, trying not to check e-mail. That became a nonissue when my phone fell out of my back pocket and into the toilet two days into our trip. I was in an all- out panic and am embarrasse­d to say I desperatel­y fished it out and tried to dry it out. We got some rice and tried that method, hoping it would spring back to life, but nothing happened. At first first I was really uncomforta­ble being so out of touch, but the disconnect­ivity allowed me to focus on the guy I was with and realize he wasn’t right for me. I was clearly meant to focus on that reality, not my e-mails.”

Brenda Reynolds Founder, BKR Consulting

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