 Good morning, Hank, it's Tuesday. So as of tomorrow, I will be one month into my year without social media. I left Reddit, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter because I felt like I couldn't effectively regulate the amount of time I was spending on those platforms or the experience I was having, and also I was looking at my phone hundreds of times per day, which just kind of freaked me out, so I decided to take a year off. For my computer, I use a Chrome extension called StayFocused, which has a so-called nuclear option where you can block access to certain websites completely. And then I use the ScreenTime app on my phone to disable Safari in the App Store, and I deleted all of the, like, attention-grabbing apps. Now, my phone still does a lot of things. It can order food and hail rides and check-in for flights and take high-resolution video and predict the weather, and also it's a phone. Now that I think about it, it's basically a magic wand. It's just a magic wand that can't tell me how people feel about Will Smith being in the Aladdin movie. How's it going so far? Um, okay. The first thing I learned is that without really being aware of it, I type the words Reddit and Twitter and Facebook into a web browser, like, dozens of times per day. Like, I had noticed that it had become harder to, like, lose myself in a book, for instance, without feeling an urge to check my phone or open my computer, but I did not realize how fractured my attention had become, or how many times per day I would answer the first hint of boredom or stasis by going to Reddit. A month in, I am happier. Or, at least, less anxious. One of the weird things about social media for me is that it tends to make me feel very itchy in a way that only social media can scratch, and turning it off has mostly cured that itch. Also, I have more time. I had time, for instance, to write an art assignment video about Agnes Martin, which you can check out in the doobly-doo, and I have more time with my family, which is nice. Another advantage is that I spend less time looking at the news, but I think I might be better informed. Like, I have a much better idea, for instance, of what's going on in Yemen than I did a month ago. Also, because I'm reading my hometown newspaper, I feel like I understand my IRL community a little bit better. Lastly, I'm getting bored more often. Now, don't get me wrong, boredom is unpleasant, but if I can let myself be bored, which is a big if, as I'll get to in a moment, then I find myself, like, having thoughts, which is really nice. Also, those thoughts, because I can't share them on Twitter, are, like, mine. All that noted, leaving the social internet hasn't been, like, the magical experience I'd hoped for. For one thing, I miss it more than I expected to. I miss reading funny Reddit threads on soccer. I miss the feeling of camaraderie on Twitter. But the bigger issue, and maybe I should have seen this coming, is that simply eliminating certain social media platforms from my life doesn't fix anything. It doesn't unfracture my attention, and it doesn't make my information diet inherently healthier, because it turns out there are lots of other websites that are happy to feed without nourishing and distract without enriching. Not being able to get to, like, any websites on my phone has been really good for me, I think, but I need the internet on my computer, and more to the point, the internet is not the problem. My internet is the problem. And the thing I've learned this month is that for my internet to change, I need to change. For the next 10 weeks over at Crash Course, I'm hosting a series on navigating digital information. It tries to take an evidence-based approach to evaluating the quality of the information we encounter online, and spotting and dismissing misinformation. Now, I have sometimes believed that I'm, like, immune to misinformation, but I've come to understand that such a belief actually makes you more susceptible to it. And the tools I've learned through working on this Crash Course have been super helpful to me, both in terms of how I research online and in terms of what kinds of information I ingest. In fact, I think it's positively affected my internet more than any particular website I've blocked, so I really hope you'll check it out. That said, I am gonna stay off social media for the rest of the year. I don't know that I recommend it in general, but I think it is necessary for me. I need to discover more of what lies on the other side of boredom. Hank, I'll see you on Friday.