We’ve all been there. You’re halfway through a conversation, and your hand instinctively reaches for your phone. You’re at the dinner table, and a notification lights up, and suddenly, you’re not really there anymore. You’re somewhere else, pulled into a screen, responding to a message that could have waited.
Be honest. How many times have you checked your phone in the last hour?
If you’re like most of us, the answer is probably more than you’d like to admit. And that’s not a judgment, it’s just the world we live in now. But here’s the thing: somewhere between the work emails, the school WhatsApp messages, and the endless scroll, we’ve lost something precious. Our time. Our peace. Our presence.
It’s time to take it back.
The pressure to be always available
There’s an unspoken rule in modern life: if you have a phone, you must be reachable. Reply within minutes. Answer that email at 10pm. Respond to that WhatsApp from your child’s teacher on a Sunday afternoon.
Sound familiar?
Picture this: You’ve just closed your laptop after a long day. You’re finally off the clock. Dinner is done, the dishes are washed, and you’ve settled into your favourite spot on the couch. You pick up your phone to quickly check the weather for tomorrow, and then you see it.
A WhatsApp from your child’s teacher. Sent at 7:42pm.
“Good evening, parents! Just a reminder that the science project is due tomorrow. Please ensure your child brings their completed model to school in the morning.”
Your heart sinks. Tomorrow? You scramble to remember if your child even mentioned it. You glance across the room, they’re already asleep. Suddenly, your relaxing evening is gone. You’re now searching through cupboards for cardboard, hunting for glue, and wondering how you’re going to pull this together before morning.
We’re living in an age of constant connectivity. Our phones buzz, beep, and light up from the moment we wake up to the moment we close our eyes at night. Work emails follow us home. School notifications interrupt our weekends. Social media demands our attention at all hours. And somewhere along the way, we forgot what it feels like to simply be, without a screen in front of us.
For many of us, the pressure feels even more intense. Work-from-home culture has blurred the lines between office and home, there’s no longer a clear “clocking off” moment. The laptop sits in the corner of the living room, a constant reminder of unfinished tasks. The boundaries that once protected our personal time have faded, and we find ourselves checking emails at odd hours, responding to messages while making dinner, or scrolling through work chats long after we should have switched off.
And let’s not forget the constant stream of news from local politics to global crises, that leaves us feeling overwhelmed and helpless.
We’ve become so accustomed to being available 24/7 that we don’t even question it anymore. Women in their 40s and 50s are often the primary coordinators of their families, managing work, children, ageing parents, and community responsibilities. The phone becomes just another demand on already stretched attention.
The truth is, being constantly available doesn’t make you more valuable, it just makes you more exhausted.
So, what can we actually do about it?
The good news? You don’t need to move to a cabin in the woods or throw your phone in the dam. You just need a few simple strategies to take back control.
Start small. Pick one or two that feel doable and build from there. Before you know it, you’ll wonder how you ever managed without them.
The 20-minute morning rule
Start your day without your phone. No emails, no WhatsApp, no scrolling. Just you, your coffee, and the morning. Give yourself 20 minutes of quiet before you enter the digital world. It sets the tone for the entire day; those emails can wait.
Phone-free zones
Designate areas in your home where phones are not allowed. The dining table is a great place to start. Dinner time is for connection, not notifications. The bedroom is another non-negotiable, your sleep will thank you. Leave your phone in the kitchen and invest in an old-fashioned alarm clock. Your body will notice the difference.
Have a family check-in
At dinner or before bed, do a quick round-up with your child: “Any projects due? Forms to sign? Permission slips?” Catch it early – before the 7:42pm WhatsApp ruins your evening. A few minutes of prevention is worth hours of last-minute panic.
Create a shared family calendar
Whether it’s a physical calendar on the kitchen wall or a shared digital one, get everything in one place. School projects, sports events, appointments, if it’s written down, it’s less likely to sneak up on you. And the whole family can see what’s coming, so there are no surprises.
The 10-minute rule
Before you respond to any after-hours message, pause for 10 minutes. Ask yourself: “Does this actually need my attention right now, or can it wait until tomorrow?” Nine times out of ten, it can wait. That pause gives you permission to choose, not react.
Reclaiming your presence
Once you’ve got the practicalities in place, it’s time to think bigger. Because this isn’t just about managing notifications, it’s about reclaiming your life.
When was the last time you had a conversation without glancing at your phone? When was the last time you sat in silence, without reaching for a device? When was the last time you truly noticed the world around you?
Being present is one of the greatest gifts we can give ourselves and the people we love. It’s in those moments of undivided attention that we connect, recharge, and find joy.
Our phones are incredible tools. They connect us to loved ones across the world, help us work flexibly, and give us access to information at our fingertips. But they’re tools, not masters. And somewhere along the way, many of us forgot that.
Touch some grass, literally
There’s science behind the “touch grass” trend. And no, it’s not just for Gen Z. Spending time in nature lowers cortisol levels and improves mood. Go outside, feel the sun on your skin, listen to the birds. It’s free therapy.
Studies have shown that spending just 20 minutes in nature significantly reduces stress hormones. And you don’t need to hike a mountain to benefit, a walk around your neighbourhood, sitting under a tree, or tending to your plants all count.
Make it a daily ritual. Step outside, take five deep breaths, and simply be. No phone, no agenda, no pressure. Just you and the world around you. Your mind and body will thank you.
A gentle reminder
This isn’t about perfection. There will be days when you’re glued to your phone, when work demands it, when life is chaotic. That’s okay.
The goal isn’t to abandon technology, it’s to remember that you’re in control. You decide when to engage and when to step away. You decide what deserves your attention and what doesn’t.
And sometimes, the bravest thing you can do is put the phone down, step outside, and simply be.
