
By Analyn Taganile
I used to think I was just tired.
But it wasn’t the kind of tired that sleep could fix. It was mental noise—the kind where I’d open my phone for five minutes and lose almost an hour. The kind where I’d jump from email to Instagram to messages to work tabs, and still end the day feeling scattered.
Digital burnout isn’t something people often talk about. But I’ve felt it.
My phone is both my work tool and my escape, and over time, the line between productivity and overstimulation became blurred. I’d check notifications the moment I woke up. I’d scroll at night thinking I was “unwinding,” but my brain was still processing information long after I put the phone down.
Slowly, I started noticing the signs:
- A shorter attention span
- Difficulty focusing deeply
- Feeling overstimulated yet restless
- Reaching for my phone without thinking
It didn’t feel extreme. It felt normal.
But normal doesn’t always mean healthy.
So I started making small changes.
No scrolling in bed.
Notifications off during focused work blocks.
Unfollowing accounts that trigger comparison.
Allowing myself to sit in silence without immediately filling it.
Nothing dramatic. Just intentional.
I’ve realized that focus is something I now have to protect. In a world constantly competing for attention, guarding my mental space feels like an act of self-respect.
I’m still figuring it out. I still catch myself scrolling mindlessly at times. But now, I notice.
And maybe that’s where reclaiming focus begins—not by quitting everything, but by choosing when and how you connect.Maybe this is your sign to reset, too. 💛