For years, I’d wake up with the urge to use the bathroom. Strong, natural. But instead of going straight there, I’d check my phone — messages, updates, just 2 minutes.
By the time I got to the toilet, the urge was weaker. Less output. Felt incomplete. I thought it was a diet issue.
Then 2 days ago, I tried something: phone stays on the table. Wake up → straight to the bathroom. No screen.
The result? The best bowel movement I’ve had in months.
That’s when it hit me — my phone wasn’t just wasting my time. It was messing with my body.
The Numbers #
I started tracking 3 metrics every night using Android’s Digital Wellbeing — screen time, unlocks, and notifications.
Before (Mar 1–5, no commitment):
| Day | Screen Time | Notifications | Unlocks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sun, Mar 1 | 3h 11m | 69 | 37 |
| Mon, Mar 2 | 2h 35m | 69 | 25 |
| Tue, Mar 3 | 3h 57m | 117 | 38 |
| Wed, Mar 4 | 3h 28m | 102 | 67 |
| Thu, Mar 5 | 6h 19m | 148 | 34 |
Average: ~3 hours 54 minutes / day. 101 notifications. 40 unlocks.
After (Mar 6–8, commitment started):
| Day | Screen Time | Notifications | Unlocks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fri, Mar 6 | 1h 26m | 81 | 20 |
| Sat, Mar 7 | 18 min | 67 | 9 |
| Sun, Mar 8 | 45 min | 59 | 14 |
Average: ~30 minutes / day. 67 notifications. 13 unlocks.
That’s a 85% drop in screen time. In 3 days.
It’s Not Just Willpower — It’s Design #
I didn’t just “decide” to use my phone less. That never works and never worked for me earlier. I redesigned my environment:
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Smartphone stays on the shelf. Not in my pocket, not on my desk. On the shelf.
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Feature phone for daily use. A basic phone that only calls and texts. I carry this one. I asked my frequent contacts to call this number instead.
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Cash instead of digital payments. Every digital payment was a reason to pick up the smartphone. I started withdrawing cash from the ATM. One less excuse to touch the screen.
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Turned off notifications. Rigorously. Only the most essential apps can ping me now.
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WhatsApp on desktop. Work messages from my software dev freelance client come through my computer — so nothing is lost even if I don’t check my phone all day.
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Uninstalled Instagram and Facebook. Gone. Not “limited” — removed.
What I Noticed #
- Mornings changed. No phone → straight to bathroom → body works the way it should. Something that simple.
- Focus is sharper. I use my computer for work — that’s it. No phone pulling me away every few minutes.
- The reflex is real. Multiple times a day, my hand automatically reaches for my desk to pick up a phone. But what’s there is a feature phone — no apps, no scroll. It reminds me of what I committed to. The urge dies in seconds.
- 9 unlocks on Saturday. Nine. I used to do 40+.
What’s Next #
This is Week 1. I’ll be posting every Sunday — real screenshots, real data, no filters.
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s awareness. Once you see the numbers, you can’t unsee them.
If you want to try this yourself — just install Digital Wellbeing (it’s already on most Android phones) and take 3 screenshots tonight. That’s it. That’s Day 1.
See you next Sunday.
— Priyatham
#PhoneFast