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Digital detox

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Bloom with a view

Bloom with a view

We’re looking up from the captivity of screens to see a wonderful world of analogue alternatives. Real books, handmade homeware and off-grid experiences are everywhere, ready for us to reach out and grab them.

The analogue rebellion started, quietly at first, with hipsters buying film cameras and the wine sippers attending mindful painting and home baking classes. During lockdown, Netflix bingeing was through the roof, but so were sales of knitting needles, power tools and real books, with that lovely bookish smell.

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Now we’re out and about once more, the analogue rebellion is forging ahead. We’re craving screen-free fun with our real-life friends, shopping for beneficial bits and bobs sold to us by the craftspeople that make them, and looking for books to fill the ‘rustic’ bookshelves we upcycled using old pallets and the decade-old box of nails in the garage.

Christchurch has some wonderful opportunities to scratch those itches. The Riccarton Market is New Zealand’s largest, with artisans selling locally-made wares. It’s allowed the Rotary Club of Riccarton to put over $2 million back into the community since it started in the late ‘80s. University Bookshop Canterbury stocks a fantastic selection of local and international titles, including the full list of this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Award winners, as well as bright children’s books on important topics, like the significance of Matariki, and the fight for global equality. And The Colombo Bookstore is doing book shopping the old-fashioned way, with comfy chairs, curated selections and knowledgeable staff who make great recommendations.

With less time spent on digital, we’ve got more time to pursue all those analogue hobbies we’ve always imagined we’d like, and a class could help you get started. Coming to the Arts Centre in November is the Paint ‘n’ Sip Studio, a wonderful arts studio where you can attend classes and paint a picture following instructions from the studio’s talented artists, while sipping a cold glass of Sauv from the in-studio bar. You can also head down to the uber-cool Fiksate Studio & Gallery and join the fortnightly sticker-making classes where you’ll be sure to draw inspo from the vibrant urban art all over the walls. Keep an eye on Fiksate's Instagram for dates.

This year vinyl records have outsold CDs in the USA for the first time since 1986. Closer to home, Hallenstein Brothers Cashel Street has partnered with Real Groovy to open a record shop in the store, where you can flick through crates of records and stock your vinyl collection with new releases and second-hand goodies. In New Regent Street, tiny bar The Institution has board games you can whip out for some screen-free fun over beers with your buddies, and Arcadia in Barbadoes Street is filled with oldskool pinball machines and a pool table. There are some electronic games, but the lag on Ms. Pac-Man is so wonderfully protracted that it seems closer to Go Fish than Fortnite.

For some serious survival skills, enrol in a resourceful skills workshop at Rekindle. You can learn how to make felt slippers, tī kōuka baskets, soap, or your own hand-carved spatula. There are regular beginners’ spoon carving workshops, and once you’ve attended one, you can join spoon club: come back, practice, make more spoons.

Tanya Goodin founded one of the earliest digital marketing agencies, and was search engine optimising three years before Google launched.

Because of her long history with the internet, Tanya describes herself as a proverbial canary in the coal mine when it comes to tech addiction. When she realised the negative effect tech was having on her life, she decided to set up Time to Log Off, running digital detox retreats for people who want to disconnect. Now an internationally-renowned digital detox expert, she has published two books and hosts the podcast It’s Complicated. Cityscape caught up with her about how easing back on tech could improve our lives.

Tell us about those first years working in digital – was there an addictive element to it at the start? At the start I don’t think there was. It was all very new and exciting, but it was shut away in a desktop or laptop at the end of the working day. There were very few people online in the UK and social media had rather a party atmosphere. It was fun, entertaining, and supportive – I look back rather wistfully at it all now. One potential client even asked me if I’d brought the internet in my briefcase when I went to see him. No one had a clue really. When did it change? It would have to be the launch of the iPhone and the invention of the ‘like’ button, both in 2007. That’s the pivotal year addictive tech really took off. The former meant we now took the digital world everywhere with us, the latter meant companies found a way to get us seriously hooked on it. Justin Rosenstein, one of the creators of the like button, has described how it was specifically designed to give users a dopamine rush, which keeps bringing them back to the app. He’s now deleted most social media from his phone, and limits his time on Facebook. Similarly, it is fairly well-known that Steve Jobs, inventor of the iPhone, described himself as a ‘low tech’ parent and restricted the technology his kids used. If the fact that both those men gave their own inventions a wide berth isn’t evidence enough of the power of addictive tech, I don’t know what is. Your ‘eureka moment’ came when you realised you hadn’t read a book in four years. Tell us about that. I read English at Oxford University so when a friend at a dinner party happened to ask what I’d been reading recently, it came as a bit of a shock to realise I hadn’t completely finished a book in over four years. It wasn’t that I hadn’t wanted to read, but that I couldn’t focus long enough to finish any book, something I had never struggled with before. It was a real wake-up call that something was happening to my brain, to my focus and concentration. How else had your life changed as your tech consumption increased? My sleep was deteriorating, my focus was shot to pieces and my creativity had disappeared. I originally blamed all of that on getting older, but the more I thought about the vanishing amount of time I now spent on all those aspects of my life, compared to the time now eaten up by being online, I began to question it. How did you change your tech habits? Originally I went completely cold turkey to work out what was going on. I deleted all social media, I switched to a

‘One potential client even asked me if I’d brought the internet in my briefcase.’

‘dumb phone’ to call family and keep in touch with loved ones, a phone that had no digital connectivity. I don’t live that way now, but I was so deeply entrenched in it that I needed to completely step away. Are you completely cured, or do you lapse occasionally? I’m definitely not totally cured. I lapse the same as everyone else. It’s very hard to totally log off now that our lives revolve around technology. But every time I find I’m losing a couple of hours to mindless scrolling I turn off my phone and go outside, or do something absorbing and mindful. Yoga or puzzles are a favourite. How did you come to be the first digital detox expert? I have always been a classic early adopter of technology (I had one of the first Mac computers imported into the UK, and later on, one of the very first iPhones) so it was inevitable I began to feel the effects of tech adoption before others. I’ve also always been very interested in psychology. This helped me see we had the ability to go quite badly astray with technology, while others were still blinded by the huge financial potential and not thinking through all the implications. I think the combination of both those things, my personal experience and my academic interest, led me to seeing a need for a change of direction about three or so years before everyone was ready to hear about it. How is tech designed to hook us in? Technology, and in particular social media, is deliberately and calculatedly designed to hook us using the same techniques as slot machines - variable rewards combined with social validation, social proof and personalisation via algorithms. The famous Persuasive Technology Lab at Stanford University in the US developed all the tricks, starting in the late 1990s, which the addictive tech industry now uses. Interestingly, the founder of that same lab also warned very early on about the negative use some of those persuasive tech tricks could be put to in unscrupulous hands. What are the negative effects that digital technology is having on our everyday lives? Our addictive tech environment is stopping us from living richly and from resting fully. We’re becoming lonelier and more isolated; we are working less effectively; we’re never switched off and we can rarely fully relax. In 2017 the French enshrined into law that employees could ignore work emails out of hours, just to enable them to take a break after their working day. We’ve almost regressed to the sweat factory conditions of the industrial revolution with how work now impacts every area of our lives, thanks to smartphones. We now spend a lot of time on phones. What have we given up? Before smartphones and the internet we had more time to develop interests, hobbies and pastimes which refreshed, relaxed and sustained us. Think about what you used to fill your days with, say, ten years ago. Yes, some of it might have been just staring into the void feeling bored I’m sure, but a lot of it was around reading, sport, craft, long rambling chats with friends. We have pretty much eliminated all of that in favour of scrolling on our phones.

Do you find people are anxious at the thought of a digital detox? Yes, without exception everyone who comes on one of our retreats is nervous about not having their phone. I’ve even had people ask for special dispensation to keep their phone 'just for work purposes', or because they’re worried about missing some crucial message. It’s a real irrational, visceral panic people have about being without their smartphone, even when there’s a landline available (which there always is on our retreats). Even the thought of leaving the house without their phone makes people anxious. In a perfect world, how would you want people to use the internet and devices in their spare time? For the very many enormous benefits of the digital world; for education, for community-building, for keeping in touch with friends and family, and for entertainment, but not for hours on end. There are many benefits to screens, they just need to be moderated and their use needs to be a conscious choice. I would say where the alternative is to connect with a real live person in front of you – that’s when a screen is not a good choice. Kids are getting hooked on tech young – at an age where the government regulates access to things like alcohol and cigarettes. Should the government regulate tech use in any way? Yes, I’ve been campaigning for this in the UK for many years now and will continue to campaign. Tech should be regulated, and it’s criminal it’s got away with being unregulated for so long, particularly where protection for children is concerned. The writing is on the wall for tech companies now on this. tanyagoodin.com PODCAST It’s Complicated: Untangling the Relationship with our Phones Tanya chats to inspiring people about how their smartphones affect their lives – especially those whose work revolves around being online, like instapoet and illustrator Nikita Gill, and YouTuber and sex educator Hannah Witton. Her goal is to untangle what a healthy relationship with your phone looks like, and empower you with practical tips and ideas.

COURSE How to do a Digital Detox: The Ultimate Guide to Digital Wellbeing In Tanya’s six-week online course, learn about the persuasive techniques that make your phone, and social media in particular, so addictive. You’ll go on a two week ‘rewiring’ of your digital habits, and you’ll monitor your physical and mental health through this change. The course is social – you’ll celebrate your successes with your course mates as you successfully adopt Tanya’s strategies. BOOK Off: Your Digital Detox for a Better Life Off isn’t about giving up tech completely, it’s a guide to helping us find balance, freeing up hours of our time and leading us back to the pastimes, and people, we love. Tanya offers simple tips that encourage a deeper connection with others, more restful sleep and increased creativity, freeing us from technology to be more present in our own lives.

TOP TIP: BUY AN ALARM CLOCK This seems simple, but Tanya’s found that making your bedroom a screen-free space is the number one way to spend less time on your devices. When your phone isn’t by your bed, there’s no temptation to look at it at night or first thing in the morning.

worlds to explore

Wander your mind at University Bookshop, where you can dive into worlds unknown. Admire exotic and fantastical architecture, or something a little closer to home. Green your thumbs growing lush and edible plants. Walk through the great art galleries of the globe, and connect with history’s thinkers of philosophy, religion and social The Colombo Bookstore managers Charlotte Cohen and Belinda Archibald are bibliophiles with a passion for finding that extra-special read. Belinda tells Cityscape the story of the store and the regulars’ reading habits. The Colombo Bookstore doesn’t look like other bookshops. The design idea is that we want to make sure people feel comfortable. Customers can sit on the antique chairs and take their time to find a book they really love. The store is a bit antique, and a bit Willy Wonka. We’re a small bookstore, so we choose books that we really like. People are asking for poetry, local writing, gardening, cooking, issues. Take your wanderlust flying with Louis Theroux’s The Call of the Weird and feed it with Lonely Planet’s Around the World in 80 Food Trucks. Artistic education within these book-lined walls ranges from Rembrandt to The Art of Winnie the Pooh (or even The Cat Butt Coloring and Activity Book). Children can get lost in the mindfulness and children’s books. Children’s books are a focus for us – the good ones come and go out fast. Flying off the shelves right now are good cooking books and also gardening books. People are being more grounded this year, doing their own gardening, and appreciating their own space. Right now I’m reading Solitary, the powerful memoir of Albert Woodfox, an African American who spends 40 years in solitary confinement for a crime he did not commit. My favourite genre is non-fiction. I love reading memoirs. Having a bookstore was a childhood dream, so this really is a dream come true. Requests are something we love to do either for new titles or for books people have read years ago. New in the store we’ve got Hiakai: Modern Māori Canadian farmlands of Anne of Green Gables or the high seas of Who Wants to be a Pirate? Whatever your Persuasion (Austen, 1817), this is the place to give time to the simple pleasure of a good book. Now grab an armchair and learn all about the 50 Drag Queens Who Changed the World.

CARDS OF CONNECTION As well as stocking gorgeous diaries and stationery of all feels and colours, the folks at Pepa have a mission to bring back handwritten correspondence, and we at Cityscape think it’s a wholesome way to disconnect from our devices and connect with other humans in a considered, personal and long-lasting way. Try sending a thoughtfully-crafted letter on textured stock to a long-distance friend or even your mum – you might be surprised at how much joy such a simple thing can bring. pepastationery.co.nz

bookin' it

ubscan.co.nz

Cuisine by the super-talented Monique Fiso, and the beautiful Tiger, Tiger, Burning Bright! with an animal poem for every day and fabulous illustrations. What’s great about being in The Colombo is the people who visit us here. It’s not too hurly hectic, it’s got a nice feel. thecolombo.co.nz

Food & Drink

BLOODY BRILLIANT

The man behind the shaker. Bloody Mary’s mixologist Ben Crean prepares his Lemon Meringue creation. bloodymarys.co.nz

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