60 days to a healthier relationship with screens
Two months gives you time to break automatic habits, build rewarding offline alternatives, and reach the point where reduced screen time feels like freedom, not deprivation.
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Your Plan
Audit & Awareness
Weeks 1–2
Build Boundaries
Weeks 3–4
New Normal
Weeks 5–6
The Plan
60 Days plan
15 tasks across 4 milestones — 1–2/week
Awareness Phase
Weeks 1–2- Track screen time daily for a full week before making changes
- Categorize your screen time: productive, social, entertainment, mindless
- Set reduction targets — cut mindless screen time by 50%
- Remove social media apps from your home screen and turn off notifications
Boundary Setting
Weeks 3–4- Create phone-free zones and times (bedroom, meals, first/last hour of day)
- Set app time limits on your top 3 time-sink apps
- Replace one daily scrolling session with an offline alternative
- Take a weekend social media detox — observe how you feel
Habit Replacement
Weeks 5–6- Build a consistent evening routine that doesn't involve screens
- Start or restart a hobby that requires your hands (reading, cooking, drawing, instrument)
- Reduce total recreational screen time to under 2 hours daily
Intentional Use
Weeks 7–8- Screen time is now intentional — you choose when and why you use screens
- Review your 8-week data and celebrate the time you've reclaimed
- Create a long-term digital wellness plan with clear boundaries
- Fill reclaimed time with activities that improve your life
Obstacles
What gets in the way
Common challenges and how to overcome them
Challenge
Reaching for your phone out of habit, not intention
Solution
Move social media apps off your home screen to a folder on page 2 or 3. Turn off all non-essential notifications. Use Screen Time (iOS) or Digital Wellbeing (Android) to set app time limits. Add friction — a 15-second delay before opening an app breaks the automatic habit loop.
Challenge
Boredom triggers scrolling — you don't know what else to do
Solution
Create a "boredom menu" — a physical list of 10 things you enjoy that don't involve screens (read, walk, stretch, call a friend, cook, journal, play an instrument). Keep it visible. When you feel the urge to scroll, pick something from the list instead.
Challenge
FOMO — fear of missing out on social media
Solution
Most of what you see on social media is algorithmically designed to create the feeling you're missing something. Try a 48-hour social media detox — you'll realize you missed nothing important. Set specific check-in times (once at lunch, once after dinner) instead of constant access.
Challenge
Using screens to wind down after a long day
Solution
Screens stimulate your brain rather than relaxing it — the blue light and dopamine hits are the opposite of rest. Replace evening scrolling with genuinely restorative activities: reading a physical book, gentle stretching, conversation, or a warm bath. Your sleep will improve dramatically.
Challenge
Work requires constant screen time, making it hard to separate
Solution
Separate work screen time from personal screen time. When work ends, close the laptop and switch to phone-free mode. Create physical boundaries — no screens in the bedroom, no phones at the dinner table. The goal isn't zero screens; it's eliminating unnecessary, mindless screen time.
7+ hrs
Average daily recreational screen time
2,600+
Daily phone touches (average)
2 hrs
Recommended recreational maximum
50%
People underestimate their screen time
FAQ
Common questions
There's no universal number, but research suggests keeping recreational screen time under 2 hours per day is associated with better mental health and sleep. The key is quality over quantity — 2 hours of intentional use (learning, connecting, creating) is different from 2 hours of mindless scrolling.
Not necessarily. Social media has real benefits for connection and information. The problem is uncontrolled, habitual use. Try setting specific time windows (e.g., 20 minutes at lunch, 20 minutes after dinner) and strict app timers first. If you can't moderate, a longer break or deletion may be warranted.
Fill the time with activities you genuinely enjoy. If you reduce screen time by 2 hours but don't replace it with something rewarding, you'll feel deprived and relapse. The goal is trading low-quality dopamine (scrolling) for high-quality satisfaction (hobbies, exercise, connection, reading).
Required screen time doesn't count toward your reduction goal. Focus on eliminating recreational, unintentional screen time — the mindless scrolling, autoplay streaming, and habitual phone checking. Take screen breaks during work (20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes, look 20 feet away for 20 seconds).
Model the behavior yourself — kids mirror their parents' screen habits. Create device-free zones and times (meals, bedrooms, family time). Provide engaging offline alternatives. Set clear, consistent limits using parental controls. The key is replacement, not just restriction.
Significantly. Blue light from screens suppresses melatonin production by up to 50%. Stopping screen use 30–60 minutes before bed is one of the most effective sleep hygiene interventions available. Most people report noticeable sleep improvement within the first week.
Use built-in tools: Screen Time on iPhone, Digital Wellbeing on Android, and browser extensions for computer use. These give you daily and weekly reports showing exactly where your time goes. The numbers are often shocking and motivating — most people underestimate their usage by 50%.
Explore
Related pages
Improve Your Sleep
Cutting screen time before bed is the single most impactful sleep improvement.
Start Meditating
Meditation builds the mindfulness muscle that helps you notice mindless scrolling.
Read 50 Books a Year
Replace 1 hour of daily screen time with reading and you'll finish 40+ books a year.
Build a Morning Routine
A phone-free morning routine sets the tone for intentional technology use all day.
Build a Workout Habit
Exercise is the perfect screen-time replacement — better dopamine, better health.
AI Goal Planning
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