A time-boxed reset, not a permanent ban

Pause the targeted inputs for a defined window (a day to a few weeks) to recalibrate.

Why it works

A bounded abstinence period lets effortful activities re-acquire contrast: when the cheap reward is temporarily off the table, the brain reweights slower rewards as relatively more worthwhile. A defined end-date also keeps it sustainable and prevents the rebound bingeing that all-or-nothing bans tend to trigger.

How to do it

  1. Choose a window with a clear start and end (a single weekend, or a 14-day block).
  2. Decide the rules in advance and write them down, including allowed exceptions.
  3. Plan what you will do instead, so the freed time has somewhere to go.

Evidence

Short-term reductions in social media or smartphone use show modest improvements in mood, focus, and sleep in some controlled studies, though results are mixed and effects are small. (rct)

Effect sizes are modest and findings are inconsistent across studies; a reset helps recalibrate habits, it does not "heal" your reward system. The durable benefit comes from the habits you keep after.

Sources

  • Hunt et al. (2018), limiting social media use and reductions in loneliness/depression, J. Social & Clinical Psychology

Common mistake

Going cold turkey on everything indefinitely, then bingeing harder when willpower runs out. The rebound often leaves people worse off than a modest, sustained change would have.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you scope a realistic reset window and checks in through it, then helps you decide what to keep afterward so the reset turns into a lasting habit rather than a relapse.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).