Boston Herald

Expert helps workers unplug & get back on task

- By Tribune News Service

Attention, phone scammers and telemarket­ers: About 50 people in San Diego are now better equipped to deal with you after they listened to a talk last week given by Nicole Rawson, a digital wellness expert.

At the end of her presentati­on, Rawson guided people how to take out their iPhones, pull up the Settings menu, then navigate to a feature called “Silence unknown callers.” The focus of her talk wasn’t financial scams and fraud, but a different kind of theft: Time burglars.

When that phone buzzes or rings and you weren’t planning to take that call, “it’s an opportunit­y to get hooked back into doing something you did not intend,” Rawson said. At the lecture, Rawson discussed how addictive digital design impacts developing brains and masterfull­y claims our attention. She named five common online compulsion­s (gaming, pornograph­y, social media, shopping and excessive browsing). And she shared ways to minimize distractio­n and stop giving away minutes — and focus.

“Every time you open up an app, every time you play a game, every time you read a news article, your attention is being captured,” she told the group. “That leads to decreased focus stamina, which is really troublesom­e.”

People surrounded her when she stepped away from the podium and shared their travails with invasive online media. One woman talked about heading to YouTube for a quick video and then being sucked in for hours. Others talked about trying to cut down on screen time for their kids.

Rawson noted how online compulsion­s are toxic in the workplace and how employees can better protect their time. Cutting down on internet overuse — like doomscroll­ing, slaying at Candy Crush and impulse shopping — is really important, Rawson said. That’s because screen addictions cut into productive work hours and damage people’s ability to do deep, meaningful, focused work.

Rawson shared three concrete strategies profession­als can use to set limits around their social media and digital technology usage, so they can be more productive and have a better work-life balance.

Step one: Understand your habits.

“Most people do not check their own screentime on their personal devices, and that’s where a lot of the consumptio­n comes: on your personal phone. Unless you’re watching Netflix or YouTube on your computer,” Rawson said. Step two: Cut back. One way to cut back is to turn off notificati­ons, which barge in throughout the day and clamor for attention. Another: Block off your online social or gaming time. Dedicate a set amount of time each day for social media, texting, checking up on the world.

“You set a timer, and after the 30 minutes you’re on to the rest of your day,” Rawson said.

Step three: Push back with your own intentiona­l design.

“Make things more difficult to access,” She said. “If … you’re tempted to go to Amazon and do some shopping, or you want to go on social media, move those apps five screens over.”

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