The Dr. Hyman Show - How Social Media May Be Ruining Your Life with Cal Newport
Episode Date: February 6, 2019Think about how often you check one of your many social media accounts. Chances are you spend a pretty good portion of your time, productivity, and brain power participating in these apps each day. Th...ough it may seem harmless, or even beneficial, the ubiquitous use of social media is working against our health. Our brains evolved to process social cues from real people; the more we’re on social media the less we’re having real-world interactions that challenge and support our cognition. My guest on this week’s episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy has never had a social media account—and he’s managed to thrive! Cal Newport is an associate professor of computer science at Georgetown University and writes about the impact of technological innovations on our culture. Newport is the author of six books, including Digital Minimalism and Deep Work. As we dive into the topic of social media, Cal shares his expertise on how it’s impacting public health and culture in ways much greater than you might expect.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So welcome to the Doctors Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, a place for conversations that matter.
That's Pharmacy, F-A-R-M-A-C-Y. And today we're going to have another amazing conversation
about things that really matter that we might not really want to talk about, which is social media
and our addiction to our screens and technology. And we have with us an amazing guest who's Cal
Newport. He's an associate
professor of computer science at Georgetown University, and he's researching cutting-edge
technology, but he also writes about the impact of these innovations on our culture, on our behavior,
on our thoughts, on our performance. He's written six books, including Digital Minimalism, out in
February 2019, and Deep Work, about doing work that is quality work that's based on focus and attention,
which we can't really do when we're distracted by our technology and social media.
His work has been featured in lots of publications, including New York Times, Wall Street Journal,
The Economist, and he's been writing essays for his personal website, calnewport.com,
which I encourage you to check out for over a decade.
And he has never had a social media account and he is a millennial and he did an
extraordinary TED talk which is almost 5 million views which disrupted our idea about whether or
not social media is a good thing or a bad thing and he actually makes a case in this TED talk
of staying off of all social media. So welcome Cal Cal. We're going to get into this now.
Yeah. Well, yeah, thanks for having me. I'd like to say, if you have any complaints,
direct them all towards Twitter. That way I won't see them.
Great. So now you did this TED Talk, which described why we should quit. And you talked about some of the key myths that are about why we have to be on social media. And you challenge those myths, you break them down,
and you talk about how social media interferes with both our social connections,
despite it being a social network, and deep work.
So can you take us through what you presented in your TED Talk?
Because it was very compelling, and it made me want to shut off and turn off all my social media accounts,
which would basically affect my business, but that that's okay yeah yeah but you might be happier
yeah well actually just a quick a quick intro to this you know my wife and uh and i um love to be
together but uh often you know i'm on my phone or i'm focused on the latest whatever I got to do, or it's usually work-related. But all she wanted was the quality of my attention.
And when you look at relationships
and what breaks and keeps relationships
is the quality of the attention we give to each other.
And so for our anniversary, I bought her a box,
a little wooden box.
And she goes, oh, that's such a nice little box.
Thank you, thank you. And I said, no, that's such a nice little box. Thank you, thank you.
And I said, no, that's not the present.
The present, I take my phone,
I stick it on the box for the weekend,
and I give you my full attention.
And she started crying.
And it was like a very emotional,
that's the best present I ever got.
And it sort of speaks to how much
we've been attached to our phones
and disconnect from real relationships.
Yeah, we have been.
And what's crazy is that
you can get that strong of reaction
about the idea of putting your phone in a box. And yet most of us are so comfortable just using
it constantly. I mean, could you imagine anything else in your life that was causing such contention
or stress or what have you that your spouse would actually cry when he talked about, I will step
away this for a few weekends and that you wouldn't be thinking this is now my number one priority
is to be wary of this ill in my life and yet somehow with phones and
social media we've been giving them a pass yeah we look at them we kind of wring our hands we say
kids these days you know they're on their phones too much then we go back to business as usual so
yeah I'm out there trying to disrupt and saying I think many fewer people should be using social
media yeah so tell us about your TED talk and what you came up with, which of those four different myths or ideas that we get into in
our way of actually limiting our social media. Yeah. So in my talk, I called it quit social
media. My argument was maybe not everyone should quit it, but I think many fewer people should be
using it. My analogy is it should be like Game of Thrones, right? There should be a fair number
of people that really like it, but most people don't care. It shouldn't necessarily be ubiquitous
like it is right now. I think that's the problem. So in that talk, I decided I'd go over some of the
common arguments in favor of social media. And see, they're not nearly as strong as people like
to think. So for example, people think if you're not on social media, you're not going to be able
to maintain a healthy social life in the 21st century. And we don't have a lot of evidence
that's true. And in fact, we have a lot of evidence that the opposite is probably true.
I mean, the literature is a little bit confused. If you look at the literature, you get
peer-reviewed studies that are saying social media causes loneliness, it causes isolation.
And then you'll see Facebook, for example, pointing to studies to say,
no, look at this, social media makes people happier,
usually in quotation marks, if you use it correctly.
Sort of like the soda company saying that soda doesn't make you fat.
Well, it is true. It is true.
So I did a literature review recently,
and almost every positive article did have a co-author
that was a Facebook data scientist.
But actually what's happening, if you dig deeper into this literature,
is that the positive social media articles,
what they're essentially finding is in isolation,
there are certain things that happen on social media
that make you happier than if you weren't doing them.
So if I put you in a room, for example, and say do nothing
or send a note to a close friend or family member on social media
you'll be a little bit happier having sent a note to a friend or family member than doing nothing
now it turns out that actually uh talking to a non-close friend or broadcasting information to
a large audience or reading information that was broadcast to a large audience none of this even
in isolation makes you happier yeah but there's a few things in isolation so now you're you're
facebook friends but you're but your actual friends.
Your actual friends and family.
Yeah, at the same token, though,
the sort of best research we have
that looks at the correlation between
social media use in your life
and indicators like perceived loneliness
or social isolation,
say that the more you use it, the less happy you are.
Even when you do all of the standard controls
that you would do for all the different demographic and economic variables you think might be relevant.
And so what's going on, right?
This seems like they're countervailing.
Yeah.
And what's probably happening, what the researchers think is happening is that you get a little boost to do sort of virtual interaction with people.
But real-world interaction is incredibly valuable and incredibly
useful and vital to being happy. And the more you use social media, the less of the real world
interaction you actually do with friends. Because you have the sense of, I'm connected to people.
I'm talking to people all the time. I just sent these six messages in the last five minutes. And
I talked to my high school roommate and here's my old college roommate. But the benefits you
get from that is so small compared to what you're losing by doing less real conversation and analog
interaction that you end up net negative. So the more you use social media, the less you do actual
real interaction and the worse and worse, ironically, your loneliness actually gets.
Yeah. So face-to-face instead of Facebook.
Yeah. Face-to-face instead of Facebook. I mean, our brain, the degree to which our brain has evolved to essentially be a social processing engine is incredible, right?
If you look at the research on how much of our brain power actually goes towards trying to understand and process complex social cues,
it's completely impoverished when you take away this rich stream of input that you and I are seeing right now,
being in person and seeing facial expressions and movements and voice tonalities.
And you replace it with a one-bit indicator like a like.
A one and a zero, yeah.
Yeah.
It doesn't do it for our brain, right?
It's leaving it anxious and without much to do.
And so that's sort of the first myth that somehow you're going to be happier in your social life if you're using social media.
The inverse seems to be true.
If you don't use it,
now you're going to have to do real social interactions
to feed that urge.
People have forgotten how to do it.
I was amazed with these kids and millennials.
They don't want to call each other on the phone.
They are socially awkward
and not able to actually have real connections
and authentic relationships,
but they're on social media doing that,
and they've lost the skill of actually human connection interaction.
Yeah. And it's a vital skill. I mean, not just for sort of navigating the world,
but just for, for mental health and happiness. So yeah, it is a big issue. So, you know,
for people who are a little bit older, I'm old enough that, you know, I learned how to do all
of that. I grew up before there were cell phones and social media. And so the big risk for someone
my age might be that I get away from that too much. But if you're younger and it's all you've ever known,
I think it's a big problem. Yeah. Now, the other part of it is not just that it doesn't make you
happier, but you quote research that it actually makes you anxious and depressed and impairs your
cognitive function. So not only is it not helpful, but it may be harmful. So you talk about the harm
part. Yeah.
Well, so the first indication I had that there's something screwy going on with this constant connectivity was probably four or five years ago.
And so I was doing an event on a college campus. It was an elite college.
And I was talking to the head of the mental health services on the college.
And we had talked about some of these issues. And she said, you know, Cal, something I have noticed in my time here is that the issues we're dealing with with the students have changed dramatically.
That what we used to deal with were sort of the standard mix of mental health issues you might expect in, you know, 18, 19, 20-year-olds.
There were sort of eating disorders and homesicknesses and some OCD and schizophrenia and some depression, sort of a mix, a variety.
And she said it was like a switch flipped.
And it's all anxiety and anxiety-related disorders.
And not just that that's overtaken everything else, but the number of students coming in
with these issues is well beyond what they ever saw before.
And I said, OK, well, what changed?
And without a hesitation, she said smartphones.
It was that first class that came in that had had smartphones throughout their teenage years.
They began to see it.
So that caught my attention.
Then we get a few years later, you get Jean Twinge.
She's one of the, or Twinge, I might be pronouncing her name wrong, but she wrote this, I think, very important book last year called iGen.
And she's one of the top generational demographers, the world expert on understanding trends and
how they differ between generations.
And her whole book is basically making this argument that that's not a mirage, that this
entire generation, this entire iGen, the first generation to have smartphones starting from
their teenage years is having off the charts mental health and anxiety related issues.
And it's not not there was some push
back that okay well maybe this was uh reporting has changed or more um aware and acute to sort
of mental health issues now that's not the issue because we have hospitalizations for uh suicide
attempts among the same group has gone up right along with the with the mental health issue so
this is actually real issues that are happening and And she looked at every cause she could.
She did not want the answer to be something so simple as it's smartphones and social media.
It's really been the only thing that fits the,
the only thing she's found that actually fits the timing and the characteristics of the data.
So I think there's actually, for young people, a mental health crisis caused by these phones.
Yeah, no, I see that.
I do see that in patients.
I see it in my family members. And, you know, the other part of it, in addition to the anxiety and social isolation,
which, you know, in some way are a little surprising, I think it makes you more connected,
is the effect on your cognitive function. And you talked about the intensity of your focus
and attention being related to the quality of your life, your productivity, your success in life,
that you actually said you don't even work after 5 o'clock
and you've written six books and what are you, 25 years old?
I went.
How old are you?
36.
Okay, well, that's pretty good.
It took me until I was like 50 to write six books.
But I think that that's a very interesting point
because what happens to your ability to focus,
pay attention, engage with your life, be present and alert to what's actually happening when
you use social media?
Yeah, that's actually my entryway into this issue.
So I wrote this book back in 2016 called Deep Work.
And the premise of the book is that the ability to focus intensely without distraction,
that's what I call deep work, is actually becoming more important in our economy at the same time
that we're getting worse at it because of technology and that this created a mismatch.
And so that you would have this big advantage if you're one of the few to really care and cultivate
your ability to concentrate. And one of the things I discovered in researching this book is that,
yes, these tools are having a permanent effect on people's ability to concentrate. It's not a matter of whether the
tool is in front of you right now in the moment in which you're trying to concentrate. If you're
just used to, in general, pulling out the phone or the tablet or opening up another tab, as soon as
you get a little bit bored, give yourself a little bit of hit of stimuli, it permanently changes your
brain, or at least for a long term, such that if I then take you away from all those stimuli
and then put you in a Faraday cage where you can have no distractions, where you're on
the plane and the Wi-Fi is not working, you're going to have a hard time focusing.
And people think, oh, it's different.
Yeah, at home, I do this.
I get bored.
I look at the phone a lot.
But at work, I really concentrate.
It has an effect.
It's like an athlete saying, I only smoke on the weekends,
not when I'm training. The smoking is still going to affect you when you're on the playing field,
you're hurting your physical health. And so these intense addictive forms of distraction have a
long-term effect on your cognitive health. And this has professional impacts. If you work in
a knowledge sector job, it's going to make you worse at what you do. Yeah. That was interesting.
I was sitting at a lecture the other night with a friend of mine, and she was on her
phone, and she was tweeting, and she was picturing, and she was doing all kinds of stuff, Instagramming.
And I said, give me your phone.
And I grabbed the phone from her.
I said, open your phone.
And so I opened the Screen Time app.
And it shows not only the amount of screen time, which was a lot for her, but it showed
the number of times you pick up your phone.
And it was like a thousand times in a day yeah and she's what's yours and i opened mine it was like 60 or 70 times which is still a lot yeah but i was like
wow that's a lot and i think you know people don't realize that it affects your ability to be
engaged in any particular work for a long period of time and that's concerning because the things
that matter to us the quality of work we do,
determines our success in life
and determines our ability to actually sort of be able
to be engaged with what's happening around us.
And that's a big deficit.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's crazy.
If we were professional athletes and we're eating junk food
or we were smoking, people would say, that's crazy.
Like, you make a living off of the physical health of your body.
But it's the same thing if you're in elite-level knowledge work.
I mean, it's literally your brain and its ability to concentrate,
its ability to take in and process information
and produce new information that has new value.
That's at the core of probably a lot of your audience's living, right?
That's how they make a living.
And to be on these phones all the time, that is the cognitive equivalent of junk food.
And yet, somehow, we're not seeing it that way. So you make a living. And to be on these phones all the time, that is the cognitive equivalent of junk food. And yet somehow we're not seeing it that way.
So you're a scientist.
What is the data that validates what you're saying?
Because I can imagine people listening, oh, yeah, that's just kind of sure.
Maybe I don't believe that.
I'm fine.
What is the actual hard data that supports this thesis that being on your phones all the time
or being distracted by social media is actually impairing your ability to focus well one of the the more deep work that's right well i think one
of the the more uh alarming uh pieces of data that's out there now is we call it sometimes
economist a productivity paradox which is if you study non-industrial productivity so the economic
metric of productivity so the amount of actual output produced per hour spent working, it should have continued to increase over the past 10 years
as we've had this revolution in not just our technology, but in connectivity and information.
People are connected in places they never were before. They have essentially all the world's
knowledge at their fingertips. They can move files and information from a device that fits in their
hand with a supercomputer-like power. This is amazing. And yet during this entire period, productivity has
been stagnant. It's not going up. It should have been going up, but it's not. And there's a growing
sense that one of the forces at play here is that, yes, these technology is giving us more
options and power. And yet at the same time,
it's working against the way that our wetware works.
To actually fragment our intention in the way it does
makes our brain actually worse
at concentrating and producing value.
And so the downturn from that
combined with what should have been
enhancing our productivity,
which is the tools, is just flattening out.
And so I think this has a real issue.
And I can only imagine that we're going to see if this is true. Non-industrial productivity
actually start to go down as the younger generation that's more connected than anyone
before starts to come into the workforce. So we have that piece of evidence. Then we have a lot
of more close study. There's individual type studies actually trying to understand work.
The late work by the late Cliff Nass of Stanford University.
He did a lot of work actually in the lab, the psychology lab with individuals working
on what he called multitasking, but it's basically the same idea.
There is no such thing, right?
There is no such thing.
And he actually helped spread that idea.
But he was the one who actually had some pretty good research on chronic multitaskers.
I think they're really good at concentrating, but they're much worse than people who don't. Another thread of research I'd
like to point people towards is to work on attention residue that's done by a professor
named Sophie Leroy. And what she's finding is that when we think that we're not multitasking,
what we're doing when we've rejected multitasking now we know we're not supposed to do it um so we try to do one thing at a time we only have one window open uh but every five or ten
minutes we do a quick check right so we don't have multiple windows open we're not doing the
late 90s style of multitasking around the phone and doing email already we're doing one thing but
every five or ten minutes it's check the phone or the. And what she's finding is that context switch and then back again, even if it's very brief,
leaves what's called attention residue, which you can measure in the lab, reduces your cognitive
capacity and takes a while to actually clear out.
And you can measure this easily in the lab because you actually have people doing cognitively
demanding puzzles.
Yeah.
And so they can see you start making more mistakes and it takes 10, 20 minutes to actually
get back up.
To reset.
And then in that 20 minutes, you do another one another one you do another and so what most knowledge workers
are doing is they read cliff nasa's work and they say i don't multitask i'm so advanced i just single
task but because they're quick checking every five to ten minutes they put themselves in a state of
persistently reduced cognitive capacity it's like a reverse nootropic or something a drug that makes
you worse at what you wow yeah i know when i write my books i literally have to turn off uh my phone i turn off email i often turn off wi-fi unless i'm not
researching some article and it's and i can literally sit and work for eight hours or read
and i just or i just print it out in paper and do it you know because it's so powerful and i get so
much done and yet you know when i'm constantly distracted between different things i feel like
i'm never really productive it's attention residue yeah i feel like i'm always sort of catching up
and never complete it and that's a it's a very interesting thing because what you're saying is
that by using our phones and technology that we do we're actually decreasing our ability to be
productive to function and there's no such thing as multitasking yeah and even if you think you're
single tasking if you're quick checking it can be just as bad. Quick checking. Yeah. Well, that's sort of
like multitasking. Now, you know, I feel like the thing that is fascinating about your work is that
you also sort of talk about the positive benefits of not being on your social media or devices.
And I'd like you to later clarify about the difference between being on devices versus social media because they're not always the same, right?
Yeah.
So what are the benefits of doing this?
And by the way, there are so many movements out there around digital detox.
Yeah.
There are camps.
People go to the weekend and they put their phone away.
We in our Center for Functional Medicine at at Cleveland Clinic we all put our phones and
during meetings we put them you know at the front of the table and no one can touch them
and we have much more productive engaged meetings yeah well so the interesting thing about digital
detoxing it puzzles me a little bit right it's really big right now it's this notion that I'm
going to, whatever,
put my phone away for a weekend or Sundays.
I step away from the phone and I don't use my phone or something like this.
But then you go back and start using it again normally.
And so if you think about this,
if you use this methodology for detoxing from anything else that we're addicted to,
it's not going to work that well.
If I said I'm an alcoholic, so what I'm going to do,
I have it all figured out, don't worry.
I'm going to go away and on Sunday I'm not going to drink, but then get back to it again on Monday. Is that really solving the problem? This is my issue with just the detox
notion or the digital Shabbat notion of you just take a little bit of time off. And so the lifestyle
I often pitch is, and this is the new book, is not digital detoxing, but digital minimalism.
Yeah. What is that? So it's a philosophy of technology use that says you should start with your values.
What do I value?
What's important to me in my life?
Then for each of those, you ask, okay, what's the best way I can use technology to help these specific values?
And then that's it in terms of your engagement with technology.
You can ignore the rest, miss out on the rest.
As opposed to this maximalist approach of,
if I can think of anything interesting about using this app, I'll download it.
If I can think of anything that might be cool about this gadget, I'm going to buy it.
Minimalism says, no, no, my life is about doing the things I really care about and really value.
Often there's some way that you can use technology very intentionally
and very selectively that's going to even boost and enhance those things you care about, right?
I mean, I'm a computer scientist.
I love technology.
Yeah, exactly.
But you only use it in that way,
and then you ignore the rest.
And so instead of cluttering your life
with every possible form of technology
that begins to eat away at your attention and happiness,
you have this very intentional use of a few things
that do really well,
and you're happy missing out on everything else.
So, I mean, to get back to your original question, I've been studying these digital minimalists
and they're calm.
They're happy.
You can have a conversation with them for a long time and they won't once glance at
a phone.
They don't have this obsessive urge to document every nice moment.
They can just actually be there.
They're much more productive in work.
They produce things of
great value they're respected by their friends are involved in their community i mean you can
go down the list but when they they free themselves from this constant sort of emotionally draining
pull on their attention and get back to here's what i care about this is what i want to do
i'll use technology selectively to help that and that's it it's it's a much more present mindful
and satisfying type of life but that's not so easy because you also talk about the design of social media to be addictive.
And the data scientists and behavioral experts, sort of attention experts who work for these
social media companies design these programs to be addictive. So can you talk about what you mean
by that? Is it truly addictive?
Is it just a metaphor? And what's actually happening biologically? How do they come up with
the ways to make these things so sticky? Yeah, it was a depressing period when I
dived into the reporting and research on how these companies make their products addicting.
It's a little bit dark, actually.
So the best way to understand it is what psychologists think is that what they're trying to create is what they would probably call moderate behavioral addictions.
So this is different than, say, a strong substance addiction.
So, I mean, if I take away Facebook from a heavy Facebook user,
they're not going to sneak out in the middle of the night to go to an internet cafe because they have to get a fix.
On the other hand…
They might.
Yeah, they might.
But if you're a heavy Facebook user and it's in your pocket and you can get at it any time during the day, you're going to have a very hard time not using it a lot because that's what a moderate behavioral addiction is going to drive you to do.
Yeah.
A lot of this absolutely is engineered. What these attention engineers do is they try to hijack
psychological vulnerabilities. There's actually a famous lab at Stanford where they studied this.
So this is something they're pretty good at. So I mean, I can give you a couple examples.
On Facebook, for example, when they first added notifications on the mobile
app, the designer said clearly
this should be within the Facebook palette, which
is gray and blue.
It's a very nice, aesthetically pleasing thing.
The attention engineers came back and said, no, it
needs to be alarm red because we get
a much higher click rate
if it's that color. It catches your attention.
It's very hard to avoid.
The notion of
this sort of endless
scrolling.
This was emphasized in
part because it exploits
psychological vulnerability sort of like a slot
machine would that there might be something.
One more scroll away, there might be
something really interesting. These companies
have invested millions
of dollars to solve really, really hard
computer science problems, problems I know about as a computer scientist.
You mean like programming issues?
Programming issues that they really didn't need to solve, like, for example,
auto-tagging people in pictures. This was a very hard problem in image recognition.
But now if you post to Instagram, it can figure out, okay, this person, that's Dr. Hyman. Let's
send them a note and say, do you want to tag this person, you know, that's Dr. Hyman, let's send them a,
you know, a note and say, do you want to tag this person, right? This is very complicated technology.
Why did they do it? Because if you say, yes, I want to tag them, that sends to you what they call
social approval indicators. And the richer the stream of intermittently arriving social approval
indicators that's arriving in your sort of virtual app inbox
the more irresistible it becomes to tap on so so one of the things they optimize for is this is why
the like button took off yeah right it was originally there for a much more mundane reason
but every time someone clicks like social approval indicator every time someone tags you in a photo
social approval indicator so now you have inside this app every time you click on it indicators
that other human
beings are thinking about you. Sometimes they're not there. Sometimes they are. It's like a slot
machine. How does that affect the person hitting the like? It affects the person getting the like.
Getting the like. They want the richest possible stream of social approval indicators coming at
you from your network. That makes it almost irresistible to click on that app to see what's
going on. I mean, that's just pure psychological vulnerability.
There's no reason for there to be like buttons on these things.
Original design of social media was not so two-way.
You would post things that people could read.
They added that because you get social approval,
and they get that tagging so you could get social approval indicators.
And that plays on this deep-seated psychological vulnerability.
Someone is thinking about me, and I can get evidence of it
if I touch this button right here that's an incredibly powerful thing and it really shot up their profitability and
their average user minutes once the the company started introducing these into their social media
apps i mean the whole experience is engineered yeah to keep you obsessively clicking on this
thing and looking at that screen what about the brain response to this because there's a dopamine
response which is the same hormone or i mean the
same neurotransmitter that is stimulating your brain when you have cocaine or heroin or alcohol
or nicotine right so how does that play a role in here well it's the same effect that the you know
the famous uh xyler experiments with the pigeons uh pecking on the lever and if they intermittently
got food the way that messed with the dopamine system made them addictively tap
in a way that if they knew they'd always get food, they wouldn't.
And this is the effect that all of these intermittently arriving
social approval indicators have.
It's not food nuggets.
It's likes and tags.
But they're not always there.
But sometimes they're there.
And that messes with the dopamine system in a way we've known
since those experiments in the 1970s that can be…
BF Skinner, right?
Yeah, it's impossible.
It's impossible to ignore.
And the best way to train your animal is intermittent reinforcement.
Don't give them the treat every time.
Make them guess and then keep them coming back.
Yeah.
There's even rumors, I don't know if it's true, that Facebook for a while was actually purposely introducing randomized delays into giving some of this feedback back just to make sure that it was a little bit more intermittent.
I don't know if that's true, but I wouldn't put it past them
given what I've learned. So then there's good science about how they're doing this and the
technology that they're using and it is addictive. Yes, it's meant to be. Yeah. Yeah. That's
frightening. So you think you're in control, but you're not. No, you're the product. Yeah. There's
a reason you're not paying for this. They have their clients, which are the advertisers. Yeah.
And you're the product.
And they wrap you up nicely.
I mean, anyone who has a small business or a large business who's advertised on social media will tell you it's wonderful.
And this is why.
It's because they have something close to a billion users worldwide that are clicking on this thing obsessively.
It's like an advertiser's dream.
So let's talk about this book, Digital Minimalism, a little bit more. I mean, it's coming out in February of 2019. And what are the main theses
you have in the book? What are the take-homes that we really should pay attention to? And why
should we be reading this book? I mean, what I argue is that your digital life is as complicated
and as important as, say, your physical health. And we learned when it comes to our physical health, we learned during the 20th century when our diet changed and we got the advent of a lot of highly processed food and food abundance.
People started to get really sick.
We got heart attacks.
We had people, you know, this was, this was, people got unhealthy.
And we learned that this issue was more complicated than just maybe throwing some tips at it.
Like, well, you just try to eat healthier.
Maybe not eat too much.
That didn't work.
I mean, this is almost every guest on your show
is that this is very complicated.
So we had to get much more sophisticated
in how we thought about our relationship with food.
And we had to have whole philosophies developed
that people could subscribe to.
You would say that I'm now primal or paleo
or something like this or vegan or vegetarian,
but we had a whole philosophies
arise about different food what's the right way and is values based and i think of course we need
this in our digital life because we're having the same type of health issues they're just cognitive
happening as these digital technology spirality controls the same thing as fast food and processed
food coming in the early 20th century we can't't just throw tips at it. That's all we're doing now is take Sundays off.
How many times do I hear someone say, turn off notifications?
Like that's going to solve the underlying problem.
I mean, it's like, you know, whatever, telling people don't buy too many Doritos or something.
There's deeper problems.
So my idea was to get healthy in our digital life, we need the same type of thoughtful,
sophisticated philosophies we have
in, say, physical health. And so digital minimalism is one such philosophy. And if it's not this,
you should have another, but you should take it that seriously, that you should say, this is my
philosophy towards my digital tools. I've thought about it. It's based on my values. And I can
follow it. I can use it to push back, make a bulwark against these sort of addictive forces
trying to get at my attention. And so that's the motivation for us. A digital minimalist is one
such philosophy. Start with your values, figure out how to use technology to help them, ignore the rest.
So how does that practically work? Because you can give up alcohol, cigarettes, but you're
going to have your phone with you. And it's usually connected to cell service or Wi-Fi. Yeah.
So how do you then take that choice of wanting to be a digital minimalist but still have this powerful sense of addiction
and need to obsessively check your phone?
Well, you know, I was just writing an article about this this morning
before coming over here, so this is fresh on my mind.
But actually what I did in this article is I went back
and looked at the video of the original keynote address in 2007, where Steve Jobs walked out
on that stage at the Moscow Convention Center in San Francisco and said, you know, we call it
iPhone. Today, Apple reinvents the phone, right? So the very beginning of this age. And what's
interesting, if you go back and rewatch it, is how different it was people used to talk about these devices
versus how we use them today.
Yeah.
So you go back and watch this original keynote.
For the first 30 minutes, what Steve Jobs is talking about
is look at this beautiful interface.
Look at how good we made the iPod.
We now have a touch interface.
It's beautiful.
And look at how much better the phone is than the phone you have now.
It's now much easier to make calls. It's now much easier to make calls.
It's now much easier to do whatever.
I talked to one of the original team.
That was before Facebook.
Before Facebook.
Before Twitter.
Yeah, before Twitter.
Before the App Store.
There was no App Store.
Yeah.
Yeah, he didn't trust it.
He's like, I don't want other people's stuff on here.
Like, we have a great experience.
I talked to one of his original developers more recently when I was researching the book.
And he said, Oh yeah.
Jobs did not like the idea that someone else's app would be on there.
He thought it would be ugly and it would crash it.
And that he really did think of it as an iPod that made calls.
And so what the iPhone used to be was a beautifully engineered device that took a small number of things that people already valued and did every day
and made that experience even better.
People loved music.
It was a beautiful music experience.
People make phone calls.
It was a beautiful phone call experience.
And my argument is, go back to that.
Let the phone be what the phone was supposed to be,
which is a beautifully engineered phone.
If you need to find directions or call someone
or load up the doctor's pharmacy,
and it's nice interface where it's gonna play
that's great but let it be that it doesn't have to be what it's become now which is this constant
companion this sort of like source of diverting information all day long so my advice in that
article uh was take off your phone any app in which uh someone makes money from your attention
yeah so get all the social media off there. Get off the breaking news stuff. Get off those games
in which you obsessively play and you pay
money to get whatever, like a bonus
or whatever that is. Take that all off the phone.
Take email off
if you can. If you're not sure
if you can, try it
and see if you actually get in trouble.
I think people overemphasize
the necessity for them to be
that accessible. I mean, it used to be with smartphones, for them to be that accessible.
I mean, it used to be with smartphones, email had to be on there because laptops were huge.
And when people were on the road, you didn't have access to email.
But now laptops are really small and really light, and tablets are much better.
And so you don't need it on the thing that also comes with you to your son's baseball game and also comes with you to church.
Take that off if you can.
Bring it back to just being an elegant device that does a small number of things really well you pull it out occasionally to do specific things and then otherwise it's you know in your bag or on the the table by the doorway you know it the minimalist approach to
a phone is to make it into a phone but uh you know here true confessions i i was at a conference
and um i was in a lecture it's was kind of boring. So I pulled my
phone. I stuck my earphone in. I listened to your TED Talk. And I felt like I got real value more
than what I was doing. So that would all go away, right? Yeah. Yeah, you'd be bored more. But
actually, it's good to be bored more because here's the problem. If your brain gets trained,
this Pavlovian response that every time I get a little bit bored, I get a really nice stimuli that gets rid of my boredom.
The problem is when it comes time to do something hard, almost always a hard thing is going to be boring in the technical sense that there's not a lot of novel stimuli.
You're focusing on the blank page to try to write something or whatever it is, right?
And if your brain has learned boredom means stimuli, boredom means stimuli, it doesn't tolerate it. And so when I was helping people in business be better at concentrating, I had to tell
them, you need to be bored way more often in your life outside of work, or your brain is never going
to tolerate the type of concentration we all used to be used to, the sort of the boringness of just
doing one hard, valuable thing. So I don't think boredom is all that bad, actually.
So how has it affected your life, being a digital minimalist?
Well, I think it's been an important part of my life.
So I've never had a social media account.
So you don't even know what you're missing.
Yeah, people say that.
So you've never taken your first snort of cocaine.
It's true, but I don't think social media is rocket science.
I think I have a pretty good sense of how it works.
I don't think it's not the secret meetings of the Mons over here. I sort of know what goes on on Facebook,
even if I don't have an account. So I've never had a social media account. I don't web surf,
so I don't have a staple of sites to cycle through when I'm bored. When I work, I work
really intensely with a lot of organization. When I'm done, I'm done. I
have clear cutoffs between the two. And it's been great for me. I mean, my line of work depends on
concentration. So I'm a writer and a theoretical computer scientist. And so I stare at blank pages
and I try to solve theorems. And so the ability to concentrate is everything. It's like my 40-yard
dash time if I was a linebacker
or something like this, right?
And so I think it's had
a huge positive effect.
I'm very comfortable with boredom.
I'm comfortable concentrating
for long periods of time
so I can produce more work
in less time.
This is one of the big advantages of it.
Socially.
You hear that, everybody?
More work in less time.
More work in less time.
You know, the factor
that came up a lot
when I was researching deep work
was two,
in the sense that
in different lines of work, people who were really intentional about their ability to concentrate would produce about a factor of two more work.
2x.
2x, yeah.
And in hard fields.
I mean, it's not about you're a little bit less distracted or maybe the moral argument that we shouldn't be so distracted.
It's nice to be more focused.
It's about massive, massive improvements to the amount of work you produce.
It almost looks like a superpower.
In some fields, it can almost be like a superpower.
So besides the deep work, what about deep life and that aspect of it?
Because you're saying not only does it affect the quality of your work,
but also the quality of the rest of your life.
Yeah, I've definitely discovered that to be true.
I mean, I have three boys under the age of six.
Yikes.
I have a busy household, but I can just spend time with them a lot.
I mean, I don't have my phone out.
I mean, this gets me in trouble.
Yesterday, I was with my two older kids, and we were gone for maybe three or four hours.
I had them at Sunday school at the Temple, and we did a couple of other things.
And I realized about an hour into it that I guess my phone was somewhere still at home.
Because I don't notice these type of things necessarily.
So it's great for the relationship.
It may be bad if my wife needed to reach us in an emergency, but I can be more present with them.
I read a lot, which to me is really important.
Paper, you read paper books.
Paper, I read a lot of books.
Yeah, like that's important to me.
I walk a lot.
That's important to me.
I think if I was constantly plugged in
to all these social indicators and news and entertainment,
I would probably be an anxious wreck.
I know myself, right?
George Packer, the New Yorker writer,
had this essay once about why he doesn't use Twitter.
And he says, the reason I don't use it is not because I think I'm above it, but because I worry if I did, I'd let my kids go hungry.
I think I'm kind of in that camp.
I don't know what would happen if I opened myself up to that.
I mean, I think I'm a patsy when it comes to these type of manipulations, so I don't even want to go there.
It's funny you said it took you an hour to figure out you didn't have your phone.
I think for most people it would be like five minutes.
They'd feel like they lost their arm, and what are they going to do?
Yeah, there's something to recommend that.
Or go somewhere in a city without your phone.
It's really nice to try to figure out the directions, right?
Like we all used to have to do.
Like, okay, well, literally that's east because the sun's over there
and I need to go to 22nd Street.
And I don't know.
I don't even know if they make actual maps anymore.
Like when was the last time you saw a map for sale in the gas station?
I don't know.
I bought one a few years ago.
I have it in my car.
It's spiral bound.
It's great.
It's all the roads in America.
What a great piece of technology.
It's not just you.
When you're writing your book, you do this investigation of people who wanted to do a digital detox.
And you thought, you know, maybe who's going to do a 30-day detox?
You'd find like five people.
But you had like 1,600 people sign up to do this voluntarily.
Yeah, 1,600 people.
The New York Times ended up writing an article about it.
It became a big thing.
But I didn't call it a detox.
What did you call it?
I called it a declutter. Because the idea between
this was you take 30 days away from all optional personal technologies, no social media, no online
news, anything you'd get away with not using. But the idea was not just to go back to it all when
the 30 days were over. Instead, it was to start from a blank slate. So the 30 days you were detoxed,
you no longer felt sort of compelled
to use all these things,
your slate was clean.
And then you could start
and start reintroducing technology very carefully
and really make it earn its keep back into your life.
So before you download the random app
that you sometimes click,
you say, is that really something
that's the best way to support something I valued?
If not, don't put it back in.
And you do that again and again with everything you used to have in
your life. And so these 1600 participants ended up with much more minimalist, much more intentional
technologies in their life. And for a lot of them, it was a huge difference.
And what did they notice?
Well, there's a couple of things they noticed. So first, it was really hard for the first week.
People said they had this compulsion i had to check
something i had to look at something one young woman took everything off her phone right and had
this compulsion to check things on her phone that was so strong that she ended up obsessively
looking at the weather app because it was the only thing on her phone that still actually
had information you could click on and get some piece of new information and i guess it's going
to change temperature in five minutes well she said she said for that first week, she could have told you up to the minute the temperature
in like 12 different cities worldwide or something like this.
But then that faded.
The second thing a lot of people noticed was that they had forgotten how much pleasure
they got out of the analog activities that used to fill a lot of their day.
They had stopped hobbies, long conversations, sports and athletics, things that use their hands and their bodies and their mind in the real world, manipulating the real world, interacting with real people, painting, writing.
That came up a lot.
Knitting, woodworking, getting back to playing soccer, getting back to the ultimate Frisbee league uh four or five different people sent me sort of long uh payouts to return
to the library and how much they forgot how much they love going to the library and just browsing
yeah and coming away with a stack of books um and they had forgotten how much pleasure they got out
of it and by comparison how much less enjoyable their life was when they filled all of those
moments with this much more lightweight type thing. And then the final interesting thing is some of these people afterwards said,
forget the declutter, I'm going back to everything,
and found they'd lost a taste for it.
Really?
And so they said, I'm so excited.
The 30 days are up.
Let's get everything back on there.
And it was after you stop eating fast food, right?
You come back to it after a while.
You're like, ah, so salty.
Yeah.
And they lost their taste for it.
They said, this is impoverished.
It doesn't taste as good.
And so that was a big eye-opener to me.
Yeah, both the scope
of how many people are interested in this,
but also how quickly
they can make their lives so much better.
It's true.
You know, I found it fascinating
that Apple introduced this new feature
on the iOS 12,
which is screen time.
Yeah.
And, you know, it's curious.
People underestimate the amount of time
they spend on their screens.
And my nephew, I asked him to start sharing with me.
He's 25.
And he's like, well,
because I only do two hours of screen time a day.
And that was his report every day to me.
Yeah.
And when he actually looked, it was seven hours,
most of it on social media or YouTube,
which is sort of a social media, in a sense, platform.
And it was stunning to me and to him,
and it's all the interstitial space that gets filled up
that actually has a negative effect on your mood,
your concentration, your ability to function,
work, attention, happiness.
All these things that we think it's giving us, it's actually taking away.
We write all these storylines about how all these technologies are so vital.
I used to get such hate mail.
Yeah, I bet. You're not popular. I'm not popular.
I said quit social media, but I've written about this before
in various major publications, get off social media.
I used to get just tons of hate mail but i'll tell you you know
people saying it's just it's absolutely vital and here's all the ways in which it's at the core of
you know all things that are good in the world that's really started shifting and so this has
been the other interesting thing i've noticed it's a backlash in the past couple of years you
know people are getting much more comfortable with this idea that maybe whatever,
General Mills doesn't have all of our interests in mind.
Maybe I shouldn't be eating Lucky Charms every day for breakfast.
That same type of thing is going on.
And there's this backlash growing where people are starting to get interested in hearing other options.
Okay, so what advice do you have for me?
Because having on this show is not necessarily my best interest
because I share a lot of my content
through Instagram, through Twitter, through Facebook, through email. And it's really how
people connect to things that are meaningful or that are life-changing or that help them
grow. How do you reconcile that? Yeah. Well, there's an interesting, I think it was Seth
Godin had this interesting idea that he wrote about recently. And I'm going to best paraphrase it.
But he basically said, for example, the Mona Lisa is huge on social media.
But the Mona Lisa doesn't tweet.
Mona Lisa is big because she's iconic, not because she's really good at using these tools or something like this.
And so people do use social media to share things.
That's good if you're producing things that are good and that people want to share.
But it doesn't mean that you have to be heavily engaged in it yourself.
And that's often the case.
But how is it fair to ask my listeners or people who are interested in my work to be
on it, looking and listening for it?
Yeah.
Well, there's a tension.
There's a tension.
I mean, I think there is a tension, right?
I mean, I think...
Everybody listening, make sure you just watch my stuff.
Nobody else's is fine.
Just keep mine on there.
Well, but there's nothing wrong with a pod, right?
I mean, like a long-form podcast is fantastic, right?
I think it's intellectually stimulating or this or that.
But I think...
But to find out about it, people have to find it somewhere, right?
That's what you're getting at, right?
And should you be encouraging...
You have to encourage people to be on these tools so they can find out about this good stuff but on
the other hand these tools could be really addictive there is attention so the the best
way i can recommend people to to maybe step away with it in a in a cautious way is uh uh recommend
take this all off your phone right um if you don't have it on your phone you've gotten rid of 99 of
the power of these tools to hijack your brain.
That's where almost all of the attention engineering effort goes.
But you still have the account,
and you can still log on on your desktop computer once or twice a week
and see what's going on.
In fact, I would argue that most people could probably fulfill 99% of the value
they get from social media in about 20 to 40 minutes a week.
Maybe like Sunday and Wednesday is logging into an account.
So maybe this is the balance we can strike right now is get it off your phone.
If it's on its phone, it's using you.
If you're accessing it through your computer, then you're probably using it for very specific things.
Like seeing is there a new episode of the doctor's pharmacy out, right?
Yeah, without it being something you check all day.
So maybe that'll be our…
And you'll face the same thing. You're publishing books. You want people to know about them. You want to get out there. You write blogs. doctor's pharmacy out, right? Yeah, without it being something you check all day. So maybe that'll be our...
And you face the same thing.
You're publishing books.
You want people to know about them.
You want to get out there.
You write blogs.
But how do you get blogs to people, right?
Yeah, you know, people find it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm not on social media.
It used to be, this used to be heresy.
My publishers were, you know,
I remember having publicity meetings
and they'd bring in the sort of the young person
who was like, okay, I'm the social media marketing expert who's going to help you with your book. And let's talk about all the
things we're going to do. And then I would watch their face fall. As I said, I don't have any of
those accounts. Well, that has an impact. You know, like I, you know, I, I've done a lot of
promoting of my work through social media and, you know, I, I actually asked Hugh Jackman to,
cause he read my book to do something on social media. So he did a little Instagram post. I think
it might've been 15 seconds. I think it had over a million views. And the impact on my book sales was far greater than
even television or other. I was like, what happened here? I just shot up to the top of Amazon.
And it was just his ability to sort of communicate what mattered to him and what helped him
allowed everybody to kind of have the social proof and then buy the book and then they actually got healthy i mean i mean i sat with a
guy at lunch who randomly i just sat with and he had lost 60 pounds using my 10-day detox diet
and you know there's there's some value there so how do you sort of reconcile that
i think it's hard because i think these platforms have a lot of dangers with them and we have to
weigh it against the values so have a glass of dangers with them. And we have to weigh it against the values.
So have a glass of wine, but not three bottles.
Yeah, yeah.
Or maybe you don't drink wine.
But the idea is your book's important.
People will find it.
Yeah.
And if they can't find it, I mean, I know all about all of your books, right?
And I didn't find it through Hugh Jackman's social media, right?
Maybe it was Lady Gaga. Yeah, it was Lady Gaga or something social media, right? Maybe it was Lady Gaga.
Yeah, it was Lady Gaga or something like this, right?
So it's true, right?
It is very influential.
She didn't post, by the way.
I'm just saying.
Yeah.
So it is very influential, and it moves a lot of things,
but I still think we have to be really wary about it.
I mean, I think that's true.
That's true, but it's also really dangerous.
And so I don't know.
Maybe I would have sold more books if I was on social media.
I'm not sure how much the difference would be.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, so what's your advice to people who want to minimize their technologies?
Where do they start?
So, I mean, something like this 30-day declutter is a good way to do it.
Step away for 30 days and then make everything that comes back into your life
earn its way back into your life.
So keep your phone but delete all the apps other than the ones that are essential.
Yep.
Like Google Maps and Uber.
Exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
Or Lyft.
Yeah, you keep the Google Maps, keep the Uber,
but anything that's optional, you take off,
including news.
Get your news through the radio or newspaper
for a month, right?
And then be very strict about what you let back in.
Keep the podcast.
Keep the podcast, if that's vital, right?
But be strict about what you let back in.
Yeah.
So curate your own experience rather than it being curated for you.
And do it with intention, right?
I mean, if you're using something, have a really good reason why you're using it.
And it can't just be that it helps something you value.
It should be the best way to help that things that you value.
For example, I don't do social media, but I blog.
I've been a blogger for over a decade.
And it's something I've thought a lot about,
and I think it's a technology that is really, really important
for something I value, which is the ability to sort of explore
a lot of ideas, to reach an audience online,
but do so in a way that's sort of respectful of their time
and attention, to get a lot of feedback from smart people,
to meet interesting people.
Social media could give me some of those things. I think blogging does it better. So I chose what I thought was the best way.
So very intentional, very selective. Amazing. So if you were the ultimate authority for day,
king, or had some autocratic power to change laws, regulation, to sort of affect this trend,
which you see clearly is impacting our success as a society,
people's individual ability to work, to focus, concentrate, upgrade relationships.
You know, what would you say we should do as a society?
Yeah.
Well, so I'm a huge booster of the internet, for example.
I think the social internet, which is the ability to use the internet to find information
or connect to people and ideas, is massively important.
It's as important as the printing press.
Now I found you.
Yeah, so I'm a huge booster of that.
I think the problem is when you get the attention economy into this equation.
So when you use an economic model in which your attention is going to be monetized,
this is what Facebook does, this is what Alphabet does,
this is what the major social media platforms does. That's the source of the issues. And so, I mean, I often
talk about, I think, using the internet to connect to people and ideas and to find information to
pursue activism is a powerful use of it. But we need to try to divorce that more and more in our
personal choices from these giant, giant conglomerate companies that extract your attention
as their main resource. I mean, Facebook is valued at twice as much as ExxonMobil. Yikes. And instead of extracting oil from the
ground, they're literally extracting minutes of your life and packaging it up. That's what I think
is scary. So if I was in charge of the world, if I could influence everyone's behavior,
I would keep people's love for the internet, but I would get them away from any sort of product where your attention is what they're trying to extract.
I think that's where the issue is.
I would love to get back to what David Rushkoff calls the weird internet, the sort of more ad hoc, personal, creative internet.
People would create their own sites.
They would use tools that were supported maybe by open source as opposed to a giant company. You blow up the walled gardens and instead it's people can just find and interact
with other people through open protocols. There's a lot of interesting emergent bottom-up sort of
democratic type ideas out there on the internet. And that's what I think we need to get back to.
Get away from these massive, massive companies that have to get as many minutes as possible
from your mind in order to
keep their stock price high. So do we need to regulate that or legislate around it? I mean,
is there a policy that can actually help shift this in the right direction?
I mean, there's been a big upswell in regulation talk. I've certainly noticed this at the events
I've been speaking at. I'm not necessarily a believer that that's going to be the way to do it.
I think we look at it similar to the same way we looked at food and health.
Consumer education was the way to do it.
We couldn't regulate Doritos out of existence.
Like, this food is bad.
You're not allowed to sell Doritos anymore.
But what we could do is...
You could tax it.
You could tax it.
Yeah, you could try to...
You know, soda tax has some effect.
You could try to incentivize good food.
You could try to incentivize good food.
But none of that's going to move the needle nearly as much as reading one of your books or something like this.
And so I think that's going to be the key, is letting people know, get them away from this sort of cognitive junk food.
And get them back in control of their life and their values.
Get the same skepticism around the technology people have around their food.
Get people smarter, more intentional, more selective, taking control of their digital life.
I think it would be a lot better.
And it's really a powerful idea that you can sort of reclaim your life and actually improve the
quality of your experience and work and relationships and all that. And it's, you know, I think getting
the word out there and helping people understand the harms, the technology and what they're being
taken advantage of for,
I think that can help move the needle.
So like we know that soda causes obesity,
people don't understand that technology or social media is the issue that's driving anxiety, concentration issues,
the need to do deep work, and many, many other issues.
And that the benefits,
so it's not just limiting something that you like,
it's actually selling the benefits
of actually being in the world again and i i've noticed that i mean i i when i put my phone away
for the weekend i literally was like first and then i was like oh i get to just sit on the floor
and listen to jazz and snuggle with my cat and do nothing and not have to look for my phone to
fill the gaps in my day where i'm looking for something to learn or something to do
or something to communicate with or some momentary dopamine fix, right?
And it was really powerful and made me, again, feel like, you know,
I'm almost 60, and it made me feel, again, like when I was in college
where you just had these vast spaces and this vast openness.
Because, you know, computers started in 1984, and I was my first computer,
which was quite a while ago.
And you probably weren't born then.
And maybe you were.
You were just born.
I was two.
And just to actually have that quality of spaciousness in your life
is something that I think we all miss.
And it was just a real reminder of what matters in life and
you're not trying to take away people's pleasure and experience you're you're suggesting that
our lives will be improved by actually thinking about this thoughtfully and actually making some
choices in our personal life that actually can can improve that quality yeah i think it's a good
way of thinking about it i mean digital minimalists have nice lives yeah it's, I think it's a good way of thinking about it. I mean, digital minimalists have nice lives.
It's not either or. It's not either or.
Yeah, I mean, as I like to say, I'm a technologist.
I make my living... You're not a Luddite.
I'm not a Luddite. I mean, I make my living as a computer scientist.
I study. I try to advance technology.
And I think we can... The same way
you can say, I love food,
but I'm not, you know,
obese and unhealthy and with type 2 diabetes
from eating habits. You can say those two things.
It makes a lot of sense.
And I think you can say, I love technology, but I hate this idea that I'm going to spend
all day sort of renting my brain out to Facebook's advertiser clients.
So get rid of the junk food technology.
Get rid of the junk food technology.
Get back to the cool stuff.
Technology's great, but I mean, your life is going to be a lot better.
You can't be someone, I think, who was really serious about your physical health
and not start to think about this aspect as well.
I think you have a harder job than I do, which is telling people to stop sugar and starch.
You're like, this is much harder.
It's not, though, because people don't like this stuff as much as they think.
You take a week away from bread, you still want to eat bread, right?
But you take a week away from bread, you still want to eat bread, right? But you take a week away from Facebook and you see it differently.
Yeah, I find it's really important for me in my life to take at least two or three weeks a year where I'm gone somewhere where there is no certain service or signal.
So I go on a rafting trip this summer for a week and I brought my family and the teenagers and everybody.
I was like, everybody was just present with each other.
Nobody was like on their phone the whole time.
We're wired for that.
I mean, that's how we're supposed to encounter the world.
And if you get rid of that,
I mean, of course the brain's going to go haywire.
You can't drastically change the cognitive environment
that we spent 2 million years evolving to be used to,
do something completely different,
and then expect that we're just going to be fine.
Well, thank you for your work
and inspiring us to think about what we do automatically
and how that's affecting us
and how being attentive to it
might actually improve the quality of our lives.
So thanks, Cal, for joining us on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Thank you.
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with Dr. Mark Hyman,
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