Breaking Free From my Phone
I had become a highly distracted person. As a multitasking mother, things had got out of hand. Of course, I had to multitask to get things done and simply maintain a household, so I would cook whilst trying to keep my children amused, or I would hang up washing while engaged in conversation. But that wasn’t the problem. The problem was that my phone was always in reach.
Whenever I was having a hard time with my children I would use my phone as an escape. Whenever I heard a ping or saw the notification light flashing, I would check, even if that meant leaving a task I was busy with, or becoming distracted when someone (normally a little person) was trying to get my attention or talk to me. Whenever I heard a call, I felt a great pressure to immediately pick up. It made me feel guilty and distracted, as if my mind was in five places at once. I blamed my fuzzy mind and absentmindedness purely on my tiredness, but the reality was that I was too connected.
Sometimes I felt like throwing my phone out of the window just so that I could be free of the notifications, messages and news feeds which beckoned me all day long. I had attempted, in the past, to turn off the WiFi connection so that I wouldn’t receive messages or be able to check for updates. I had also tried just putting my phone on silent. But it never worked for long. Why? Maybe it was because I felt the need to be available to anyone who wanted to contact me, just in case it was important. Maybe it was because I had convinced myself that I needed my phone to get me through the day. Maybe it was because deep down I thought that if I didn’t reach for it, I would become bored. Or maybe, as sad as it sounds, it was because I sometimes felt ‘unproductive’ when not doing anything other than watching my children or playing with them
It wasn’t until I started reading the book “Hands Free Mama” that I felt like I had a companion to help me on my journey to becoming hands free. It gave me that push to just PUT IT AWAY. So I did. In a kitchen cupboard. And I tried to forget about it. I had changed my settings so that all notification sounds were off except calls (for emergency situations). No social media pings. No email pings. No message pings. I was free.
When the urge came for me to grab my phone (which was very often), I told myself: just let go. You don’t need it. And it doesn’t need you. And that day, I was able to resist it more than I had ever been able to before. But why? You may ask.
Because I had re-discovered the joy in connection, conversation.
I was free from the sounds which summoned me away.
I sat watching my children as they played in the bath. I observed. And I noticed….
How my daughter’s face lit up when she realised that I was watching her, simply watching her, undistracted.
How peaceful I felt when I didn’t feel the need to check my phone.
How stress free I felt just letting go.
I was carefree. I was living. And enjoying.
I no longer wanted to escape behind my screen every ten minutes. I no longer wanted to check my messages and emails when my children were present. I no longer felt the constant pressure of having to check my phone and respond. I was truly free.
I held my daughter’s hand, instead of my phone, feeling its warmth and noticing its softness as we walked down the stairs together.
I didn’t have to ask my daughter to repeat something because I was too distracted to focus the first time.
I could stop the sibling squabble before it escalated because I was fully present, both physically and mentally.
I could take a deep breath, look my child in the eye and respond more calmly to the repeated questioning, instead of answering impatiently from behind a screen.
But was that it? Had I broken free forever? Was it really that simple? Of course not.
I had tasted the sweetness of being hands free, but by evening, tiredness had got to me and my phone was back out. As I struggled to focus on my daughter, a wave of guilt washed over me.
But this time, instead of just wallowing in my guilt, the fact that I knew I had an alternative choice and had experienced its joy pushed me into action and I forced myself to put my phone away when bedtime drew near. With my phone out of sight once again, I could be fully present for those last, most precious moments.
“Night, night,” I said, as I looked my daughter in the eye.
“Love you,” I said, as I peeped through the gap in the door.
“I love you too,” was the soft reply.
I then gave a kiss in the air directed at my daughter, along with a smile. But instead of just closing the door and walking away, I waited just a moment. And that was all it took, for my presence was rewarded with an ‘I want to hug you,’ something I would have missed if I had simply rushed out of the room, eager to savour every ‘me time’ moment that I could before bed.
The next few days were up and down. When tiredness and sickness visited, my phone ‘cravings’ came back with a vengeance.
But although things weren’t perfect, they were 100% better. After just a few days I had become used to leaving my phone out of reach for much longer periods, no longer feeling the need to have it by my side 24/7. I had realised that just seeing an email or WhatsApp sign at the top of my phone made me much more inclined to unlock it and check my messages, so I removed them completely. I also turned off automatic email syncing, which meant that I had to check my inbox myself (and I rarely remembered to do that during the day.)
Whenever I felt myself becoming overly distracted, I tried be firm with myself and make the choice to simply put my phone down. And when I did, the joy returned. The joy of taking my time to watch my daughter’s face as she concentrated on building a tower from blocks. The joy of talking to my husband without thinking of the one hundred and one messages and emails that I had to respond to. The joy of simply slowing down to admire the creation of Allah through the lens of my eyes, and not that of my phone camera.
Because becoming hands free is not about throwing your phone out of the window. It is about self-discipline, maintaining a balance, and striving for what truly matters.
Will you join me?
© RS Khan 2017
Comments (8)
Salaam.
Thank you for writing this. It resonates with me. I hate that I’m addicted to my phone in all the ways you described so well. I know I need to simply put the phone away – harder said than done – but we’ve got to start somewhere and inshallah I will so I can begin Ramadan with better focus.
Wa ‘alaykum assalaam sister,
You’re most welcome. I know this issue affects so many of us, hence why I felt compelled to write something on it. True, it is not easy. Try with small steps at first – putting it away at a certain time. Physically putting it out of sight helps a lot, because you can’t grab it so easily. For me, it depends upon my level of tiredness and what I’m currently doing with my book project. Jazaakillahu khayra for your comment, it’s really rewarding to know my posts are helping people alhamdulillah 🙂
I desperately needed this reminder. But the question remains… when ARE you checking your email and all? With a project like yours it’s a given.
Very true. When I have down time with my book project it’s quite easy to control my phone use. But when we are launching a campaign, like now, it’s extremely difficult. I think the issue is not so much “don’t check your phone at all while your children are awake,” but “control the use of your phone while your children are awake.”
How? By things like avoiding talking to your children while engaged in something else, by making sure you look at your children, not your phone, while talking to them, and giving them your full attention. Not that they need your attention 100% of the time of course you can ask them to wait a minute because you are just sending a message so you cannot talk for a minute. Because being distracted and talking to them feels a lot worse (to me anyway) than simply telling them you will talk to them in a minute.
Check your phone by all means, but not constantly. Limit yourself, discipline yourself and try to control the urge to check for comments, likes etc. on a post you just made. Free yourself from the pressure to respond to someone’s question about your product/project immediately. People can wait.
It’s not easy, not easy at all. I do the majority of the work in the evening when my children are sleeping, but otherwise slowing down and realising that you are a mother and not a business woman helps you to remember what is important and that you can take things at a manageable pace.
❤
As-Salaam Alaykum
Jazaakillaahu khairan for you beautifully written topic.
I agree with what you said. In Ethiopia i saw how the mothers are not paying attentions to internet and live their lives taking care of their families and house work and those who work outside are also focused on what they are doing
subhanAllah I hardly saw a woman holding their phone when outside or inside and they care about their social lives a lot.
Even the government restricted internet for over three months for security reasons and was no internet at all and the people don’t care less
It was a lesson for me that I can live and survive without internet lol
Wa ‘alaykum assalaam ukhtee. Wa iyyaaki. Jazaakillaahu khayra for your valuable comments and support!
Also limiting ourselves to other things that distract us from our children be it a tv , house work, gatherings etc etc
Am not saying to isolate our selves or make the house look clumsy, but arranging our priorities is very important so it makes it easier to give the rights to our kids and other people/ things !
Again jazaakillaahu you always inspire me .
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