Internet Brain Is Real
Why protecting your attention is the most human—and radical—thing you can do right now.
Struggling to read a book, sit through a meal without checking your phone, or resist the urge to scroll during a pause in conversation? Do you feel like you’re always a bit on edge? Do you reach for your phone to fill any downtime, even peeing, for example? Do you feel like your attention just isn’t what it used to be?
You’re not alone.
Research shows the average adult can only pay attention for 47 seconds these days. I call it Internet Brain, and it’s making all of us dumber and more distracted.
The internet is like a slot machine: every time you swipe to see if you received a notification, like, DM, or news alert, you’re pulling the lever.
Sometimes you win: someone likes your post, sends you a funny reel, or you learn something super important that is actually valuable.
But most times you don’t. And that’s the point.
Decades of research show that intermittent rewards are far more addictive than predictable ones. With the internet, the reward isn’t just digital, it’s existential. That potential like, notification, retweet, or email—it says you matter. You exist. You're seen. And so we check again. And again. And again.
This sort of compulsive checking—even, and perhaps especially, when we don’t want to—fractures and fragments our attention, and our very sense of self.
We become less who we are and more what the algorithm reflects back at us.
Research shows that multitasking, task-switching, and information-overload dysregulates our nervous systems. We get constant hits of novelty and stress, but no meaningful outlet for action.
It’s like one of those terrible experiments where a mouse gets shocked repeatedly, but can’t do anything about it and eventually succumbs to chronic fatigue.
We are all becoming the mouse.
You have to save yourself—Here’s How
No one is coming to save you from internet brain. The greatest risk of modern overload is that we give up on thinking for ourselves altogether. Instead, we go wherever the current takes us, like automatons floating along an algorithmic conveyor belt. The only thing that separates us from this dystopia is ourselves. Our agency—our presence, our capacity to love, think, and create—must be exerted, not outsourced.
Want to reclaim some sovereignty? Here are some practical ideas to start with:
Out of sight, out of mind.
Studies show that even a silenced phone, face down, interrupts attention, focus, recall, and the experience of connection—with work, with yourself, and with other people. Even resisting the urge to check drains mental energy. The best fix? Remove the phone entirely during blocks of deep-focus work, time with loved ones, and other activities you deem meaningful.
Don’t just turn it on silent or off. Don’t just have it facedown on the table. Put it in another room altogether. It’s wild what a difference this makes.
Leave your phone out of your bedroom.
Studies show having a phone near your bed lower sleep quality and increase anxiety. Again: put it in another room. Yes, really. Even if it feels uncomfortable at first. Need an alarm? Get an analog one. Worried about emergencies? Turn the ringer on loud or get a cheap flip phone just for that purpose. I’ve spoken with so many people who truly transformed their lives, and the root of the transformation was charging their phone downstairs instead of on their nightstand.
Take a digital sabbath.
Go for a walk without your phone. Read a book. Be bored. The world makes it harder than ever to mind wander and to focus, and yet it’s both of those qualities that are so vital to our ability to think, learn, create, and grow. A digital sabbath is exactly what it sounds like: set aside a day in which you are totally unplugged. If that feels impossible, start with a half-day. Create some time and space away from the pull of constant novelty and stimulation.
Protect your brain like it’s sacred, because it is. This isn’t Luddite advice. It’s human advice. You can still use tech. But use it on your terms. You want to own it, not have it own you.
Knowing the risks of internet brain and building your focus is not only a competitive advantage; it’s key to a good life.