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After You Vote: Unplug

I’m writing this post about eighteen hours before the first polls open on Election Day, and it feels tense out there. The New York Times, for example, just posted an article headlined: “How Americans Feel About the Election: Anxious and Scared.”

Based on extensive interviews conducted over this past weekend, the Times concludes:

“Americans across the political spectrum reported heading to the polls in battleground states with a sense that their nation was coming undone. While some expressed relief that the long election season was finally nearing an end, it was hard to escape the undercurrent of uneasiness about Election Day.”

These results probably come as no surprise.

The question then becomes what to do with this anxiety. The first step, of course, is to vote — and not just vote, but to approach your decision honestly and dispassionately. By the time you read this, you’ve likely already completed this step.

But then what?

Here I have a suggestion that I think could be healing for all points of the political spectrum: use the stress of this election to be the final push needed to step away from the exhausting digital chatter that’s been dominating your brain. Take a break from social media. Stop listening to news podcasts. Unsubscribe, at least for a while, from those political newsletters clogging your inbox with their hot takes and tired in-fighting.

I suggest you switch to a slower pace of media consumption. Don’t laugh at this suggestion, because I’m actually serious: consider picking up the occasional old-fashioned printed newspaper (free from algorithmic optimization and click-bait curation) at your local coffee shop or library to check in, all at once, on anything major going on in the world. I think I might setup a Sunday-only paper subscription as my main source of news this winter.

Equally important is how you redirect your newly liberated attention. Consider aiming it toward real community, with real people who actually live near you, to retrain your brain to stop thinking of the world as hopelessly fractured into vicious tribes. (If right now you’re scouring this post to seek evidence as to whether I’m friend or foe, then you’re already severely suffering from this malady. )

Consider reading books again. There’s a pleasure in the conquest of deep ideas that’s been lost as we thrashed in a digital sea of churning distraction. Spend more time in nature to discover that despite the apocalyptic tenor of the online world, its analog counterpart persists, and is beautiful.

The Republic will still stand without our constant digital vigilance. But it’s unclear if our mental health can survive the status quo.

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Two announcements to share…

  • For the past twelve years, my longtime friend Joshua Fields Millburn, of The Minimalists fame, has been teaching a fantastic online course called How to Write Better. It’s open this week for a new session, so if you’re interested in improving your writing ability (which you should be), please check it out!
  • If you’re still on the fence about whether or not to read my new book, Slow Productivity, check out this insightful new review from Real Clear Books that was published last week.

6 thoughts on “After You Vote: Unplug”

  1. Thank you for this reminder to unplug. I have been on a journey of digital minimalism for nearly a year now and your insight has helped me immensely. I use Facebook for ministry and book reviews. I don’t follow anyone which has kept down the doom scrolling. It has also kept the political drama nearly nonexistent for me. Yippy!

    Reply
    • Alex,
      I, myself, have been on this journey as well ever since reading Cal’s Digital Minimalism and Slow Productivity. Especially Digital Minimalism really changed everything for me and by moving more and more of my interests away from the screen and back onto hard copy print media, my screentime has dramatically been reduced. As Cal mentioned in the above essay, I most recently subscribed to a Sunday delivery of the NYT so I can have a physical boundary with news consumption. It feels amazing to put something down and walk away when you are finished. Still use Instagram semi-regularly, but will take a needed couple week break starting today to combat the post-election insanity buzz.

      Good luck to everybody wherever they are at on their Digital Minimalism journey in hopes to restore some balance in the Force!

      Seth

      Reply
  2. “…retrain your brain to stop thinking of the world as hopelessly fractured into vicious tribes…”

    Well said! Great post Professor!

    Reply
  3. Great minds think alike! I’m just finishing up my unplugged, post-voting trip. I early voted last week, then took a trip to Jamaica and didn’t bother with international service—just used the Wi-Fi in my room and put my phone away. I spent the week staying present with friends and new people, enjoying long days on the beach, playing real card games, eating, laughing, and just being without checking in on any polls or election news leading up to today. It was a much-needed break from all the stress and anxiety that comes with these digital spaces.

    Reply
  4. This is a thought-provoking post that highlights the importance of disconnecting to recharge and focus on meaningful activities. Your insights about unplugging after voting are both timely and relevant. It’s a refreshing reminder to prioritize balance in our digital-heavy lives.

    Reply

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