Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Apple’s then CEO, Steve Jobs, demonstrates the first iPhone in San Francisco in 2007.
Apple’s then CEO, Steve Jobs, demonstrates the first iPhone in San Francisco in 2007. Photograph: Paul Sakuma/AP
Apple’s then CEO, Steve Jobs, demonstrates the first iPhone in San Francisco in 2007. Photograph: Paul Sakuma/AP

Hunched over my smartphone while my family slept, I knew I had to break my addiction. But how?

This article is more than 1 month old
Will Clempner

The modern world just isn’t set up for non-smartphone users, but after a few faltering steps away from mine, my life changed

My 16th birthday was a big deal. Not only was I allowed to throw a party at my dad’s, I was also given a brand new mobile phone. I was giddy. Back in 2006, nothing said liberation to a teenager quite like unlimited texts and a free house.

My friends and I set about creating the sort of chaos only a group of repressed teenagers yet to be fully exposed to the unadulterated excesses of the internet could. Little did we know that those heady days of pumping out noughties R&B from an iPod were to be some of the last of their kind. Just a few months later, Steve Jobs would unveil the first iPhone, altering the way we interact with ourselves and the world around us for ever.

I can’t pinpoint the exact moment I became addicted to my phone. It happens without you noticing, like a frog slowly boiling in a pot. I always told myself my excessive screen time wasn’t a big deal, that my life was better with my phone in it. I made every excuse in the book: I was learning new things, keeping my finger on the pulse, being an efficient employee and staying up to date with the people I love.

But in reality, none of that was true. My phone was such a powerful drug precisely because it gave me the illusion that it held infinite possibilities. But my experience of time and culture had slowly become flattened into two-dimensional memes and philosophical quotes, and I would bypass anything real – messages unanswered, calls unreturned – in favour of getting the next hit of dopamine. I found myself numb, disconnected from the world around me and unable to concentrate on anything for longer than a few minutes.

At the peak of my addiction, I would sit in the bathroom for hours after my wife had gone to bed, mindlessly scrolling, until I’d look up and realise another evening had slipped away, and all I had to show for it was a stiff neck and a sore thumb. By this point, the screen had become an escape from feelings of self-hate, and I knew something had to change. So I turned to the only resource I thought could help me.

There’s a certain irony in thinking that the solution to a problem with phone addiction can be found on your phone. But that’s the insidiousness of the whole thing. I set time limits, sought out podcasts and resources on how to claim back my attention. I had my wife apply a password to any app that wasn’t deemed “essential”. But in every instance, I found a way round it. And without immediate access to social media, I found myself scrolling through anything I could get my thumb on: photos, notes – even the weather app.

I knew I needed to make a more drastic decision. If I wanted to break the addiction, I decided my smartphone had to go. I had my reservations. How would I do my job? What if I missed an important call? What about my WhatsApp groups? But the ingrained belief that I couldn’t function, and wouldn’t truly exist without a smartphone was precisely what I needed to challenge – if only for my own sense of self.

I bought a Nokia flip phone with no internet and no WhatsApp, and immediately transferred my sim card. I gave out my home phone number to the few people I spoke to regularly, warned all my friends that I might be slow to reply, and put my smartphone in a drawer.

Unsurprisingly, the results were instant. Perhaps I was riding a wave of enthusiasm that came from simply taking action, but I immediately found myself in control of my attention, like I was waking up to the world after a decade-long sleep. I became comfortable with silence, I could hear myself think, and, for the first time in months, I had a proper conversation with my wife over dinner. And no – I didn’t know what boots my old schoolfriend’s workmate was going to wear to five-a-side that weekend; but it turns out the conversations that truly matter find a way of happening regardless.

But even though I felt so much better, it was hard to live offline. Online banking, login access codes, cyber-verification – in the eyes of many, it turned out, I actually didn’t exist without a smartphone. Each time I retrieved it from the drawer, it would stay in my pocket a little longer than the last time. The modern world just isn’t set up for non-smartphone users, but just a few months of space allowed me to reframe my relationship with mine. And now my Nokia and my smartphone hold equal footing in a deliberate rotation that allows me to function as a productive member of society – but switch off whenever necessary.

Occasionally I stop and think about how drastically the world has changed since 2006, in many ways for the better. The iPhone has framed almost every memory I have of my adult life. What’s changed, too, is my perception of freedom. Sometimes I wonder who’s more free – me now, with the whole world at my fingertips, or my teenage self. My world was unquestionably smaller, but perhaps I was able to experience more of it on my own terms. I suppose there’s no knowing who I’d be if smartphones hadn’t altered life so enormously. But I do know that experiencing the world through the filter of a screen doesn’t do it justice.

  • Will Clempner Clarke is a writer and digital producer originally from Manchester, now based in Somerset

Most viewed

Most viewed