Are You 'Addicted' to Your Phone: This Samsung Setting Will Tell You The Answer!
Between the text messages, long messages, and silent scrolling, many people feel like they're in control. Check out Digital Wellbeing on your Samsung phone to see how much time you waste on your phone throughout the day!
- Ways to help quit smartphone addiction
Open Digital Wellbeing to realize reality!
Many people open the Digital Wellbeing tab out of curiosity, hoping to see how much time they spent on their phones that day. But what they find is much more than that.
The dashboard is surprisingly clear. It shows you how much time you've spent on your phone and exactly how that time has been spent. You can see which apps you've used the most, how many times you've unlocked your phone, and how many notifications you've received throughout the day.
But it's the number of unlocks that will grab your attention first. Dozens of unlocks in a single day, many of which you don't even notice. Then there are the hundreds of notifications, mostly from messaging and shopping apps.
Each app has its own usage, and it doesn't take long to figure out which ones you use most. Social media and video apps are right at the top. What seemed like a few quick swipes silently adds up to hours.
Switching to category view, this becomes even more apparent. The majority of screen time is spent doing nothing productive. Almost all of it is marked as Social or Entertainment.
Daily stats tell a story you can't afford to miss
It's not a random spike or a fluke. When you look back over your week, the pattern becomes clear. Some days, screen time exceeds 7 hours. The worst part is, you can't even remember what you were doing during that time.
The weekly report goes even deeper. It shows you daily averages, highlights peak usage times, and shows you which days you spend the most time on your screen. It turns out you're often on your phone past 2 a.m., and that's almost every night. That explains why you feel tired in the morning: You've been surfing the web when you should have been in bed.
Then there are the notifications. There are over 229 alerts in one day alone, each one a little nudge that pulls you out of the present moment. Unlock data tells a similar story. You pick up your phone about every 10 minutes throughout the day. This is no longer occasional. It's become a reflex.
Your phone has become your default escape, a habit you rely on without even realizing it. And when you see it all unfold before you, one thing becomes clear: You need to take back control.
Set Screen Time Goals (and Start Taking Back Control)
Knowing the problem is one thing, but taking action is the beginning of change. Start with a screen time goal. Digital Wellbeing lets you choose how much screen time you want to maintain each day, then tracks it with a progress circle on your dashboard. Aim for under 3 hours.
Seeing the circle fill up makes you aware in a way you haven't felt before. If you hit 75% of your limit by midday, you need to slow down. That visual reminder will help you stop yourself from opening another app out of habit, and it's one of the easiest ways to limit your screen time.
Then, switch to App Timers , which limits how much time you can spend on certain apps in a day. Target your biggest distractions and set strict time limits: 30 minutes for X (formerly Twitter) and 1 hour for YouTube. When you hit the limit, the app icon turns gray, making it inaccessible until the next day.
At first, it feels very frustrating. You'll often reflexively try to open an app, only to be reminded that you're done for the day. It works. Over time, you stop reaching for your phone just to fill your free moments, and start to appreciate the quiet, uninterrupted time.
You can easily add or remove timers. Adjust a few times in the first week to find the right balance. Over time, these timers will become barriers that help break the habit without forcing you to give up anything.
Reaching your daily screen time goal feels really satisfying. Digital Wellbeing recognizes the days you succeed, and seeing those little signs of progress motivates you to stay consistent.
You don't have to give up your phone - Just silence it for a bit!
Don't be tempted to give up your phone. You still need it for work, texting, listening to music, looking at maps, and everything else that matters. So start exploring what Digital Wellbeing has to offer to create better boundaries.
Focus Mode has become one of my favorites. With just one tap, it pauses distracting apps so you can focus on work, reading, or just being present. Social media , games, and other attention-grabbing apps go silent. And if you try to open an app out of habit, your phone will gently remind you that it's paused.
That little change helps you focus on whatever you're doing. Whether you're working or taking a break from your screen, Focus Mode gives you the space you didn't know you needed.
At night, start using Bedtime Mode. Every night at 11 p.m., your phone will go grayscale and turn off all notifications. The colors fade, the buzzing goes away, and your phone becomes less appealing. That subtle change will help you fall asleep faster.
Keep checking your report weekly to see how things are changing. It shows you your average screen time, which apps you still use, and what times of day you're most active. It's exciting to see a downward trend. The point isn't to get to a perfect number, but to note progress.
Over time, you'll stop checking your phone as soon as you wake up. You'll stop reaching for it every spare second. And without even trying, you'll naturally spend less time on your phone and fill those little gaps with real things, like stretching, walking, talking, reading, or simply thinking.
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