The smartphone lies next to the bed; it's the first thing we do in the morning and the last thing we do at night. In between: hundreds of glances at the screen, notifications, scrolling, tapping. This constant digital presence has become the norm in less than 15 years – and we're only just beginning to understand the consequences.
The average screen time is 7-10 hours daily – smartphone, computer, television combined. For many people, this means more time with screens than with people, with nature, with exercise, or with deep thought. This has consequences.
The dopamine economy
Social media, apps, and games are designed to generate maximum engagement. Every like, every notification, every endless scroll triggers small dopamine releases – the same mechanisms that make slot machines so addictive.
The tech industry employs 'attention engineers' whose job it is to capture your attention. You're not 'too weak' or 'lacking willpower' if you have trouble putting your phone down – you're fighting against billions of dollars invested in behavioral manipulation.
The cost of the permanent connection
Studies show links between intensive smartphone use and reduced sleep quality (especially due to blue light and late-night use), increased anxiety and depression symptoms (especially due to social media comparisons), reduced concentration ('attention fragmentation'), and fewer face-to-face social interactions.
This doesn't mean that technology is bad – but that unreflective, continuous use comes at a price. Digital detox is an attempt to reduce this price without giving up the benefits of technology.
What Digital Detox is – and what it isn't
Digital detox doesn't mean moving into a cave and destroying all your devices. It means consciously shaping your relationship with technology: setting boundaries, clarifying priorities, breaking automatic patterns. The goal isn't hostility towards technology, but technological sovereignty.


