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If you’ve ever felt overstimulated, scattered, or just off, this list of screen-free things to do is for you. We talk so much, scroll so much, consume so much — and without realizing it, we stop hearing ourselves. Disconnecting isn’t about quitting technology. It’s about coming back to yourself: thinking, feeling, breathing, being present in your own life.
So here are 20 simple, screen-free things to do when you need to reconnect with yourself — not to be more productive, but to feel more alive again.
What does it actually mean to disconnect?
Not fully disappearing.
Not throwing your phone away.
Just creating small moments where your brain isn’t constantly reacting to something.
Moments where you’re not consuming, searching, or asking for answers.
Just… thinking.

20 Screen-Free Things to Do When You Need to Slow Down
1. Write by hand
There’s something about writing slowly that makes thoughts feel more honest.
Typing feels efficient.
Writing feels real.
2. Read physical books
No notifications.
No tabs.
No switching.
Just you and a single train of thought.
3. Keep a journal of questions, not answers
You don’t need to solve your life. You just need better questions.
If you don’t know where to start, something like a guided journal can actually help you think deeper.
4. Draw or doodle what you are thinking
Not everything has to be words. It doesn’t have to be perfect.
You can even use the same notebook where you write your daily thoughts.
5. Memorize something
A sentence.
A paragraph. Even a quote from your favourite movie or a new song that you´re enjoying.
Something that stays with you. Right now for me is trying to learn this song from Olivia Dean.
6. Copy by hand something you love
There’s something powerful about slowing down enough to rewrite words that meant something to you.
Try this:
I am allowed to take my time.
I am allowed to not have everything figured out.
I am allowed to change my mind, to grow, to pause.
Not everything needs to be productive to be meaningful.
Not everything needs to be shared to be real.
There is a version of me that exists without pressure, without noise, without comparison.
I am learning how to come back to her.
.
8. Eat without your phone nearby
It sounds small, but it changes how present you feel. I’ve been trying to take one deep breath before I start eating.
Just to slow down and actually be there.
9. Take a shower without distractions
This is where a lot of thoughts show up.
Let them.
I’ve been trying to make showers feel more intentional lately — using gentle scrubs, soaps with a nice scent, and actually slowing down.
And at the end, a quick cold shower.
It’s not the most comfortable thing, but it feels like a full reset.



More Screen-Free Activities to Reconnect With Yourself
10. Spend 10 minutes in the sun every day
No agenda.
No productivity.
Just light.
11. Walk without a destination or headphones
It’s uncomfortable at first. But then your thoughts start catching up with you.
12. Talk to people who think differently
Not to convince them.
Just to understand.
13. Sit with a hard question for days
Not everything needs to be figured out right now.
Some questions are supposed to stay with you.
If you don’t know where to start, try sitting with one of these:
- What do I actually want, if no one was watching?
- What am I avoiding by staying busy?
- What would my life look like if I stopped trying to impress anyone?
- When was the last time I felt truly like myself?
- What am I afraid would happen if I slowed down?
- What am I holding onto that is no longer me?
- If I trusted myself more, what would I do differently today?
- Don’t answer them.
Just carry them with you.
14. Stop rushing through everything
This one is subtle.
But it changes everything.
Try noticing:
- how you brush your teeth
- how fast you drink your coffee
- how quickly you move from one thing to the next
- What happens if you just… slow that down?
- Make yourself a slow, warm drink —🔗 like this chamomile latte that replaced my evening coffee — and actually sit with it.

15. Be bored on purpose
We avoid boredom like it’s a bad thing.
But it’s actually where your mind starts creating again.
16. Watch the sky for 30 minutes
It sounds simple.
It kind of is.
But it also resets something.

17. Make small decisions without asking anyone
We ask for opinions constantly.
Sometimes, you just need to choose.
Small things like:
- what to wear
- what to eat
- how to spend your afternoon
It seems small. But it builds something bigger.
18. Have conversations with strangers
You never know what perspective you’re missing.
19. Explain something complex to someone
It forces you to actually understand it.
20. Stop multitasking
It doesn’t make you more productive.
Just more scattered.
Final thoughts
You don’t need to disconnect completely.
You just need small moments that belong only to you.
Moments where your thoughts are not interrupted, optimized, or filtered.
Just yours.




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