Between the persistent ping of work chats, the hypnotic scroll of social media algorithms and the unspoken pressure to be instantly responsive, our brains are permanently stuck in overdrive. This hyper-connectivity has birthed a modern malaise: FOMO, or the Fear of Missing Out.

But a growing counter-movement is clawing back control of our attention spans. Welcome to the era of JOMO—the Joy of Missing Out.

Choosing JOMO isn’t about throwing your smartphone into the nearest river or living like a hermit. It is about intentionally choosing disconnection to find reconnection with the physical world. If your screen time report has left you feeling vaguely horrified, here is your practical guide to executing a successful digital detox without dropping off the grid entirely.

1. Establish Scheduled Analogue Hours

The phrase “digital detox” often conjures up images of a week-long tech banishment in a remote cabin. In reality, total deprivation rarely sticks. Instead, long-term success lies in micro-dosing your offline time through scheduled analogue hours.

Start by identifying specific boundaries in your daily routine where screens are non-negotiable.

  • The Golden Hour: Commit to keeping the first 60 minutes of your day entirely screen-free. Reaching for your phone the moment you wake up immediately hijacks your dopamine pathways, setting a reactive tone for the day. Buy an old-fashioned alarm clock and leave your phone charging in another room overnight.
  • The Digital Sunset: Implement a digital curfew at least an hour before bed. The blue light emitted by electronics disrupts melatonin production, ruining your sleep quality. Use this time to read a physical book, write in a journal or listen to music instead.

2. Reclaim Your Cognitive Space with Phone-Free Hobbies

When we remove screens from our hands, we are often confronted with an uncomfortable restlessness. This is because our brains have been conditioned to expect constant stimulation. The antidote to this boredom isn’t empty time; it is active engagement in tangible, phone-free hobbies.

To make JOMO sustainable, find activities that physically prevent you from holding a device:

  • Tactile Crafts: Ceramics, pottery, painting or knitting require both hands and a high degree of focus, making it practically impossible to look at a notification.
  • Tactile Kitchen Projects: Baking sourdough bread, fermenting vegetables or mastering complex recipes requires patience and presence.
  • Physical Movement: Activities like yoga, rock climbing or long-distance swimming force you away from your desk and require your full attention to be anchored in the body.

3. Optimise Your Digital Environment

If you rely on willpower alone to stay off your phone, you will lose. Apps are intentionally engineered to capture and hold your attention. To level the playing field, you need to strip away the triggers that cause you to mindlessly pick up your phone.

  • Go Greyscale: Turn your phone’s display to greyscale. Removing the vibrant, eye-catching colours from your screen instantly reduces the psychological reward your brain gets from looking at it. Suddenly, apps look dull and far less inviting.
  • The “Out of Sight” Rule: The mere physical presence of a smartphone on a desk—even if turned face down—reduces cognitive capacity. When you need to focus or relax, put your phone inside a drawer or in a bag in another room.
  • Audit Your Notifications: Turn off all non-human notifications. You do not need a push notification telling you a stranger liked a tweet, or an app reminding you to buy shoes. Keep notifications active only for direct messages from real people.

4. Normalise Being Unreachable

Much of our digital anxiety stems from the expectation of immediacy. We feel guilty if we don’t reply to a message within minutes. Embracing JOMO means breaking this cycle and retraining both yourself and your social circle.

Start small by managing expectations. You can add a polite note to your personal messaging status or email signature indicating that you only check messages at specific intervals during the day.

“True digital freedom isn’t about never using technology again; it’s about establishing a relationship with your devices where you dictate the terms of engagement.”

When you step away from the digital noise, you quickly realise that the world doesn’t stop turning just because you didn’t see an update in real time. In fact, by missing out on the trivial, you finally clear enough mental space to log back into your own life.