Your attention is a dependency. Audit it like one.
The article discusses the importance of auditing our attention in relation to the apps we use daily. It highlights how useful tools can become overwhelming dependencies that distract us from meaningful engagement. The author suggests a practical approach to evaluate which apps truly serve our lives and which ones merely contribute to noise.
- ▪Many useful apps can turn into background noise over time.
- ▪A phone audit involves assessing which apps are necessary and which are just habits.
- ▪The article encourages readers to remove nonessential apps and limit notifications to regain focus.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
try { if(localStorage) { let currentUser = localStorage.getItem('current_user'); if (currentUser) { currentUser = JSON.parse(currentUser); if (currentUser.id === 298966) { document.getElementById('article-show-container').classList.add('current-user-is-article-author'); } } } } catch (e) { console.error(e); } Jenuel Oras Ganawed Posted on May 24 • Originally published at blog.jenuel.dev Your attention is a dependency. Audit it like one. #productivity #apps #culture #faith I like useful apps. I also know how quietly they turn into background noise. You install one thing for a real reason. A calendar. A Bible app. A note app. A bank app. A chat app for one group you cannot leave.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at DEV.to (Top).