Umberto Bacchi
Tired of having to gaze at a screen for anything from a pub quiz to work calls, Anna Redman and her friend headed to a wooden cabin outside London, locked their phones in a sealed envelope and spent three days off-grid earlier this year.
“It felt really appealing to not have access at all for a few days,” said Redman, 29, who works in public relations and started to crave a “digital detox” as almost all her social contact shifted online during Covid-19 lockdowns.
The couple are among a growing number of people opting to take a temporary break from technology as the pandemic fuels tech fatigue, and an array of products and services have sprung up to meet the demand.
From apps that temporarily lock people out of their devices to luxury retreats limiting guest Wi-Fi access and restaurants that ban phones at the table, such solutions promise to help boost well-being by letting people reconnect with real life.
Even before the pandemic struck, interest in digital detoxing had been growing steadily in recent years, industry experts said.
A 2018 survey of more than 4,000 people in Britain and the United States by market research firm GWI found one in five had been on a detox, with 70 per cent trying to limit the time they spent online.
Unplugged, a British start-up that manages several off-grid cabins near London — including the one where Redman stayed — opened five new locations this year after launching the first in 2020 and was booked all summer, said co-founder Hector Hughes.
“People really just want a break and I think this is a direct result of lockdown and spending all this time on screens,” he said.
DIGITAL ‘NONSENSE’
Taking a break from tech is often billed as a way to boost overall well-being, helping to fight sleeping disorders, anxiety and depression.
But some researchers are sceptical.
The advertised benefits are often linked to other variables rather than mere tech abstinence, said Theodora Sutton, a digital anthropologist who has been researching an off-grid retreat in the US.
“People say they feel better after a weekend in the woods, but they have been on holiday enjoying themselves,” she said.
“If you just take technology away and don’t replace it with anything else, you are not automatically going to have a better time.”
Lead author Andrew Przybylski, an experimental psychologist at the Oxford Internet Institute, said the possible mental health impacts of digital technology are often exaggerated.
“It’s very likely nonsense to say that one simple trick like switching off your phone can lead you to live a happier life,” he said.
Still, using tech occupies time and attention that some might feel could be better used elsewhere.
“As human beings, we’re always trying to fit together all kinds of things, like being a father, being a husband, being a professor … there’s always a balance that you have to strike,” said Przybylski.
— Reuters