It sounded almost insignificant. One day a week, from Saturday evening to Monday morning, the phone is kept in a drawer. No dramatic announcement to followers, no erased accounts, no grand retreat in the mountains. A Sunday, a drawer, and a phone.
The first one was truly disagreeable. Before lunch, I felt that strange flicker that researchers refer to as phantom notification syndrome—the buzz that never occurred—and reached for my pocket dozens of times. By mid-afternoon, boredom had set in, making me feel uncomfortable and heavy. I recall standing in the kitchen in 1995, wondering what people really did on Sundays. Apparently, I made soup. So I prepared soup.
Something relaxed by the second week. It may not seem like much, but I read forty pages of a novel in one sitting—something I hadn’t done in almost two years. My focus had subtly decreased to the duration of a brief video, and I had only become aware of the thing’s abrupt, shocking reappearance. Reading stories from people who have attempted longer detoxes gives me the impression that this pattern—a week of withdrawal followed by a clearing of the fog—is nearly universal.

Here, the science is still lagging behind the anecdotes. Clean conclusions are challenging because a systematic review found that the term “digital detox” applied to everything from complete abstinence to cutting ten minutes of screen time. However, medical professionals report an increase in screen-related complaints, such as headaches, anxiety attacks, and sleep disturbances, as well as a growing willingness to suggest structured breaks as acceptable behavioral interventions rather than wellness theater. The mechanism might just be rest. It seems that attention requires it, just like a muscle.
The focus wasn’t what shocked me the most. It was the discussions. Lunches on Sundays lasted longer. Instead of immediately filling in the blanks with a search, my partner and I had pleasant arguments about movies we’d seen ten years prior. It turns out that it’s more enjoyable to be wrong together than to be right alone.
Parents appear to be experiencing variations of this as well, switching from screens to board games and climbing lessons, and occasionally reporting changes in their kids in a matter of days. By Wednesday, habits tend to creep back through the letterbox, so it’s unclear if those changes will last. Mine certainly made an effort.
I won’t pretend that my brain has been rebuilt after a month. There is still a lot of mindless scrolling from Monday through Saturday, and I don’t believe that one day a week can undo years of conditioning. However, Sundays now feel structurally different—quiet, slower, and strangely longer. It’s difficult to avoid the conclusion that the most radical aspect of a phone-free Sunday is how little it asks for and how much it subtly gives back as you watch this little experiment play out.
