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See but that's nice, though. I wish I could live phoneless and internetless sometimes but that would mean a very different life. I like my life pretty well right now so it is what it is. Nice thing about being constantly available is you can just turn shit off and not be.

It does mean a different life. There were circumstances at that time that resulted in my making a conscious choice to shift my focus away from all things tech as much as possible and into a different direction.

You can just turn it off. That said, I did have almost a month away from any phone and internet access in 2020. I expected that I would miss it. I did not; only exception was not being able to research a couple of wild plants I wasn't familiar with.

Library!

My big trip was a significant break, although not all the way off grid. I'm growing the crowtube channel but sometimes I can schedule things a few weeks ahead and duck out. Work, though, that's a different story. Need to be online and phoned to make money, and need money. So...

Yes, my Achilles heel, libraries. It put me in a position of more focused observation without it though.

Work is always a different story. It's the direction society was engineered to go in. Wasn't tech supposed to free us up for a better quality of life? I think that was the promise way back. Instead I experience the expectation of bells, chimes, rapid acceleration of pace, and constant demands of instant gratification. I don't find any of this to be improving the quality of my life.

I'm with you on that. But I do appreciate being able to text clients about appointments and submit invoices electronically with my portable tracking device.

No denying that it's useful, just having fond memories of life in a different time.