Daily Dispatch

Could you go offline part time? didn’t think so – until she tried it, and found herself getting twice as much done

Emma Woolf

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WHAT do you mean there’s no Wi-Fi?” I tried to keep the rising panic out of my voice. My boyfriend looked delighted, as if he was personally responsibl­e for finding one of the few remaining towns without broadband.

“No fibre-optic cables,” he said. “And mobile coverage is pretty awful too.”

Having sold his city flat and left his job in finance last year to study for a philosophy degree, he had bought an idyllic cottage in the middle of – well, nowhere. But only now was the extent of its virtual isolation becoming clear.

During the week, I live minutes from easy Wi-Fi access – where I spend far too much time online. I send work e-mails late into the night, check news updates before I’m even out of bed in the mornings, and compulsive­ly tweet mundane details of my daily life minute by minute.

How would I survive entire weekends in this rural “not spot”?

At first, my heart sank every Friday evening as I said goodbye to my Wi-Fi signal, knowing I’d be involuntar­ily off-grid until my return on Monday morning. On long country walks I found my thumbs twitching to Instagram blossom in bloom, or find out what breaking news I’d missed on Twitter.

I realised how hooked I’d become when, spotting a magnificen­t hawk soaring overhead, my first instinct was not to watch it – but to Google it.

But once I gave up trying to get a signal, I admitted that going unplugged was making a difference. While it would be impractica­l to live like this seven days a week, I could see that taking a few days’ digital detox might be the perfect balance – a 5:2 tech diet, if you will, which left me feeling mentally and physically lighter, happier and healthier.

It’s not news that many of us are hooked on our screens and finding ourselves out of Wi-Fi range can feel like a legitimate cause of panic.

Too often our best intentions – getting fit, spending time with the family or simply getting more sleep – are derailed by the 24/7 distractio­n of the gadgets in our back pockets.

This is not simply due to the time directly sunk in compulsive­ly checking our overflowin­g inboxes – or in my case, flitting between Tumblr, Netflix and back – but because endless electronic interactio­n hampers concentrat­ion and fuels “monkey brain” syndrome.

According to neuroscien­tist Daniel J Levitin, author of The Organized Mind: Thinking Straight in the Age of Informatio­n Overload, constantly shifting our attention from one activity to another “causes the prefrontal cortex and striatum to burn up oxygenated glucose, the same fuel they need to stay on task”.

In other words, it literally depletes the nutrients in our brain – making our mind more likely to wander.

The average office worker receives and sends thousands of e-mails a year, and experts believe this constant deluge is sapping the life out of us.

Loughborou­gh University researcher­s found that 70% of e-mails are attended to within six seconds of their arrival, and it takes an estimated 64 seconds to get back to work after “e-mail interrupt”.

There are signs that the disconnect­ion message is spreading: UK companies are increasing­ly implementi­ng tech-free policies, and experiment­ing in following German car giant Daimler’s lead, in automatica­lly deleting e-mails sent while a worker is on holiday.

The notion that we need to be online to be productive is a myth. Whatever your industry, whether you’re freelance or office-based, whether you’re working on a company report or the first chapter of your novel, your brain will thank you for time offline. Unplugging is the ultimate opportunit­y for strategic thinking, creative day-dreaming and problem-solving.

In the first three months of my disconnect­ed weekends, I drafted six chapters of my latest book; under the old tech-heavy regime, it would have taken twice as long. I realise now how much time I spent procrastin­ating, diving down digital rabbit-holes, or aimlessly Googling red herrings.

Instead, the tech-free time gave my brain the space to join unexpected dots, which transforme­d the writing process.

Nor did I miss out on important work: I simply set an automatic weekend outof-office message. (As an added bonus, my inbox is far less clogged with pointless mail these days.)

I discovered that disconnect­ing, however briefly, was like closing the door on the outside world when it gets too noisy – reminding my primal brain how to think for itself, without a million Wikipedia entries or other people’s opinions clamouring for attention.

It’s also been a great way to reconnect with the truly important people in my life.

The joy of missing out has replaced FOMO (fear of missing out), as I savour the weekend breaks from acquaintan­ces’ highlight reels on Twitter and Facebook and get on with living my real life.

For two days a week, I’m part of an actual community rather than a virtual one: my partner and I go for walks, we cook together, and listen to music. We potter in garden centres, and we chat to neighbours.

If there’s one area of life where disconnect­ing reaps immediate results, it’s sleep. There’s much scientific evidence showing the short wavelength blue light emitted by tablets, smartphone­s, laptops and television­s interferes with the production of the sleep hormone melatonin, disrupting our natural circadian rhythm. We are artificial­ly wakeful but simultaneo­usly sleep-starved. No wonder many of us are left feeling exhausted but unable to power down.

As a lifelong insomniac, I have started sleeping more deeply and for longer, and waking up feeling refreshed. I’m certain it’s not just the country air.

One year on, I don’t just enjoy my disconnect­ed weekends now, I guard them fiercely. Returning back to work on Monday mornings, I find I’m in no rush to reconnect.

But you don’t need a remote cottage to go tech-free: you can do this anytime, anywhere. I maintain my 5:2 tech-free regime now even at home in the city.

It’s as easy as switching my smartphone on to airplane mode and putting my tablet and laptop in the spare room.

(For emergencie­s, my mother can call me on the landline!)

After years of working through my weekends, I’ve discovered that I benefit much more from time off. You don’t need to ban work, but it should be offline: jot down your notes on pen and paper.

Similarly, you don’t need to ban all news — walking to the shops for the Sunday papers is an old-school pleasure, as is returning home to read them with a pot of tea.

Paradoxica­lly, unplugging for 48 hours is the best way I’ve found of recharging my batteries – and like any positive habit, the more you practise it, the easier it becomes.

In fact, my 5:2 tech-free diet has made me so much more productive I’m now thinking about trying 4:3... — The Daily Telegraph

The notion that we need to be online to be more productive is a myth

 ??  ?? CHILL OUT: Unplugging may lead to better, deeper sleep
CHILL OUT: Unplugging may lead to better, deeper sleep

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