In a world full of distractions, focusing on interpersonal relationships can seem daunting. Hereโs how to focus on relationships and create unbreakable bonds. Continue reading to learn more!
KEY POINTS
When we use our digital devices in the right ways, they can enhance our lives.
Used too often, our phones, tablets, and laptops take away freedom and value from our lives.
Use your phone as a phone. Start telling people, "If you need to reach me, call me."
This is part nine of a nine-part series published over nine consecutive weeks.
Hereโs How To Focus On Relationships In A Distracted World
The cognitive psychologist Daniel Willingham notes, โOne of the most stubborn, persistent [aspects] of the mind is that when you do two things at once, you donโt do either one as well as when you do them one at a time.โ It is for this reason that multitasking has been found to be a poor use of time.
To Multitask Is To Do No Task Well
In fact, research has uncovered that attempting to do two tasks at once takes longer than performing them one at a time, burns more cognitive energy, and hence wears down the brain moreโwhich causes more stress and produces more mistakes.
Perhaps for this reason, a study conducted by the late Stanford communication professor Clifford Nass and his colleagues found that adult media multitaskers exposed to multiple streams of electronic information simultaneously do not remember facts or solve problems very well.
Why? They become unable to prevent irrelevant information from surfacing in their minds. In other words, they become so highly distracted that they cannot concentrate effectively on whatโs most important, leading โto the surprising result that heavy media multitaskers performed worse on a test of task-switching ability.โ
Related: How Modern Dating Is Killing Real Love
Not As Popular As You Think
A civil engineer from Colombo, Sri Lanka, who came to one of my conferences, Chamath was surprised that the pace of communication slowed down once he started checking his phone only twice per day.
โIโm not as in demand as I thought I was,โ Chamath shared. โI realize how little people care if I take ten to twelve hours to get back to them.โ
The Online Entry Point (OEP; it refers to the only times you go online each day) model is humbling. Before you use it, you think youโre so sought after, with so many people texting and emailing you. Once you try this model, however, you quickly realize that so few people actually call you.
Weโre not as important as we think we are. Itโs really soberingโa wake-up call to our true popularity.
Related: 10 Unwritten Rules Of Modern Dating
Just A Few True Friends
A study of Facebook found that although the average person has about 150 โfriends,โ they only actually communicate in a given month with a few; many Facebook users only communicate with one or two.
Henry, a software engineer who attended one of my leadership conferences in Washington, DC, shares: โSince I started checking text messages only twice per day, Iโve discovered that most of those messages were from my wife. She would send me these quick messages such as โHey, can we meet you at three at the park with the kids?โ โCan you pick up the kids at eleven?โ or โI was thinking of buying this coffee table on Amazon. What do you think?โ
โWhen I told her about my new twice-daily text regimen, she said, โOkay. Well, I guess Iโll just call you instead of sending you text messages.โ Thatโs already reduced my text traffic by about sixty percent.โ
Since most of us communicate regularly with only a few people, we can just tell them about our new Digital Limiting Strategy.
If you are having lunch with a friend or colleague, you can say, โOh, by the way, I donโt receive notifications on my phone and only check text messages about once per day, so if you need to reach me urgently, please just call me.โ (The advantage of saying you only check once per day is that it removes any expectation of a response that day, as you may have already checked before they send their message.)
The more you tell others about your limited text-checking protocol, the less you will need to check for text messages before a meeting or social engagement because theyโll know youโve relinquished the electronic leash.
Managing A Tool
In the end, our phones, laptops, and tablets are only tools. If we use them in the right ways, they can add a lot of value to our lives. If we do the opposite, they remove value from how we experience life.
Our digital devices are like fire, a hammer, or a carโtools that can produce either positive or negative consequences for us depending on how we use them.
This article series has been about how to reduce Internet-accelerated addictions. (As I write in my new book Screened In: The Art of Living Free in the Digital Age, itโs important to note that our addictions are not to the Internetโthey are to the same things we have always been addicted to, such as porn, drugs, and shopping, that the Internet accelerates our access to at a low social cost.)
There is hope: thanks to social activism, many addictions have been reduced over time. The percentage of Americans who smoke, for example, has dropped to 13.7 percent in 2018, only a third of what it was half a century ago.
A similar pattern has emerged with alcohol. According to UCLAโs Higher Education Research Institute, the number of college freshman who claim abstinence from beer has also changed dramaticallyโfrom 25 percent in 1981 to 41 percent in 2007.
Give this strategy a try. Limit the number of times you go online daily (your Online Entry Points, or OEPs) and you will be pleasantly surprised at how your life begins to feel more meaningful, directed, and, ultimately, free.
Reduce your digital intake, avoid distractions andย establish more meaningful relationships. Let us know what you think!
Written by: Anthony Silard Ph.D. Originally appeared on: Psychology Today Republished with permission For information on Anthonyโs courses books and free videos, articles and podcasts visit TheArtofLivingFree.org . Use Discount Code iParticipate for a 15% discount on Anthony's new course, Managing Loneliness: How to Develop Meaningful Relationships and Enduring Happiness at theartoflivingfree.org/course-managing-loneliness/
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