Attention Reclaiming: Digital Minimalism in Practice
How do you reclaim your attention from digital distractions?
Attention reclaiming means auditing which digital tools genuinely serve your values, eliminating or constraining the rest, and rebuilding the capacity for sustained focus through deliberate practice. Cal Newport’s digital minimalism framework provides the structure; the harder part is building the tolerance for silence and boredom that smartphones have eroded.
Attention reclaiming is not about going offline — it is about being intentional about which digital tools you use and on what terms. The attention economy is engineered to make this hard: every app is optimized to hold you for as long as possible, regardless of whether that time serves your goals. The practices below address the environmental, behavioral, and psychological dimensions of reclaiming the attention you have been ceding.
Practices
- Conduct a 30-day digital declutter
- Set explicit values-based rules for each technology you keep
- Practice tolerating boredom without reaching for a device
- Build an analog leisure portfolio to replace passive scrolling
- Protect conversations from phone intrusion
- Build structured solitude blocks into your week
Conduct a 30-day digital declutter
Eliminate optional digital technologies for 30 days, then reintroduce only what genuinely serves your values.
Set explicit values-based rules for each technology you keep
For every digital tool you reintroduce, write down exactly which value it serves and under what conditions.
Practice tolerating boredom without reaching for a device
The capacity to sit with an unstimulated mind is the foundation of focused attention — it is trainable.
Build an analog leisure portfolio to replace passive scrolling
Replace low-quality digital leisure with a menu of high-quality analog activities you genuinely enjoy.
Protect conversations from phone intrusion
Put the phone away — not face-down, fully away — during in-person conversations.
Build structured solitude blocks into your week
Spend time alone with your thoughts — no inputs, no phone, no podcast — to restore the capacity for deep attention.
Practice this with IX Coach
Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.
IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).