- I stopped using the internet for five days to see how hard it would be.
- By the end of the five days, I had realized how seamlessly the internet had crept into every aspect of my life, from exercising to driving to choosing a restaurant.
- I won't completely give up the internet for good, but I did learn to balance out my internet usage better.
- Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.
My name's Dave, and I have an addiction.
I am powerless against the lure of the internet.
That's why, when my editor offered me the opportunity to stop using it — cold turkey — for five solid days, I counterintuitively leaped at the chance.
Would I be able to resist spending hours a day on Facebook, Quora, Apple News, and YouTube? How would I fill my day? Would I be more productive, or less? And what lessons would I be able to take away with me after the torture — I mean assignment — was over?
I didn't grow up in the internet age. In fact, I can still remember the first time I installed the Mozilla browser on a PC and explored the nascent World Wide Web. But I eagerly embraced the internet, simultaneously telling people, "this will fundamentally transform everything we know," and not really understanding what that might eventually mean. And now that the internet has changed me, I wanted to know if that was for the better.
The experiment ran from Wednesday through Sunday so that I'd be able to assess both workdays and a weekend. But because I am a journalist and can't completely unplug, I had to talk out with my editor what was an acceptable use of the internet.
Like an addict bargaining with a counselor, we laid down ground rules. No email, with one exception: I could send and receive business emails related to other assignments. Phone calls were obviously OK, but FaceTime was off-limits. No news, social media, or web browsing.
Basically, if it happens on or via the internet, it was a "no." And off we went.
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On Day One, I had to remind myself not to slip into my typical phone routine.

When I woke up on Wednesday morning, I had already taped a yellow sticky to my phone: "No internet."
It was there to remind me not to slide into in my normal routine, since seemingly everything I do marinates in the internet.
First task on deck: exercise on my elliptical.
I climbed on board, positioned my iPad, and then remembered — no internet. That meant no Netflix or Hulu, which is usually how I manage to power through the mindless tedium of pedaling for 40 minutes. And of course, I hadn't planned ahead to download anything from Netflix the day before. Would that have been allowed? I'm not sure. Let's call it a grey area. But it's irrelevant, since I hadn't thought to do it.
I fell back on plan B: music on my iPhone. Yes, I have Spotify, but I also I keep my entire CD-based music collection on my phone — about 80GB worth. It's a bit of a throwback to an earlier time, but this week it was a lifesaver. Unfortunately, music no longer distracts me when I exercise — that's why I tend to watch video. And without the next episode of "The OA" to watch, I spent 40 minutes obsessing over every agonizing spin of the elliptical.
Midday, my calendar reminded me about something that we'll attribute to a case of poor timing: I had to take my girlfriend to the airport. After we got on the road, she noticed I wasn't using Google Maps. "I'm not allowed," was my response. She wisely pointed out that this was LA, where choosing the wrong route can turn a 20-minute errand into a 2-hour crawl. "Should I open Maps on my phone?" she asked. Nope, I replied, I think that violates the spirit of the experiment.
Google Maps has become such an integral part of my life that I literally couldn't think of another way to get driving directions.
And herein was the problem: I couldn't think of a non-internet-powered alternative to Google Maps. Thanks to Andy Samberg and Chris Parnell, I know that around 2005, MapQuest beat Yahoo Maps, but Google Maps was the best. But what if you had no internet at all? My dad (to this day) admonishes me to keep a paper atlas in my car "in case your phone breaks," but even if I had such a thing (sorry Dad), it wouldn't give me traffic-aware driving directions. Is there a service you can call? I have no idea. I couldn't even Google to see if such a thing exists.
So, we drove to the airport "blind." In the end, it took about 30 minutes, which isn't too bad for West LA. But honestly, we got lucky, and it could have easily gone the other way.
Day Two was even more tortuous than the first.

My second day on the elliptical was, if this is even possible, more tortuous than the day before.
After my shower, I was ready to get dressed, and that's when I ran into another daily routine roadblock. Typically I'd say, "Alexa, tell me the news," and hear the weather and a morning news update from NPR, CNET, and a handful of other sources. But obviously, Alexa is a near-human embodiment of the internet. She was off-limits.
What was the weather going to be? I had no idea. What was the news? Would the Mueller report be released? My daily news summary couldn't tell me, so I dressed in silence, and simply wondered.
And that's the moment that I realized that, like the navigation quandary the day before, I had no way to get any of that information. How did people find out things in the days of old? Obviously, a newspaper would do the trick, but I haven't subscribed to one in years. To embrace the spirit of the experiment, I drove to a newsstand and bought a newspaper. Takeaway: Getting it was inconvenient, and reading it was like getting news through a tiny black and white tube compared to the technicolor experience of rapidly browsing multiple news sources online.
Later in the day, I settled in to work and found that I couldn't scratch my usual itch. I like to take breaks from work through the day and idly browse my guilty pleasure, Quora — I scan answers to science, technology, and pop culture topics, usually laughing at inane flat earth conspiracy theories.
This was perhaps the most painful moment yet — I didn't realize how addicted I had become — but I substituted some paper books and magazines, which, surprisingly, I still have in the house. I did discover, though, that reading a novel is harder work than I remember. I'm not proud of this, but the internet has shortened my attention span.
By the end of Day Three, I wasn't sure I'd make it the full five days — and that was before the weekend started.

Here are a few things I couldn't do today:
- Control my lights. Most of the fixtures in my apartment have smart lights which I command from Alexa. Since Alexa has to access the internet just to understand speech, I had to turn lights on and off by their mechanical switches, like Don Draper would have had to do. A small inconvenience, to be sure, but a reminder that the internet was thoroughly baked into my life.
- Communicate with friends and family. I know people who, for whatever reason, talk to me exclusively on Facebook Messenger, and so those messages stacked up without a response. I was also getting anxious about all of my unanswered personal email.
- Read SMBC and XKCD. I catch up on webcomics every few days, and these two are my favorite. Comics were always my favorite part of the newspaper when I was younger, and this is just an extension of that.
- Check up on friends. I'm not an Instagrammer. I browse Facebook. A lot. Indeed, whenever there's a lull in my day, I find myself pulling my iPhone out of my pocket and flipping though my Facebook newsfeed to see what's going on with friends and family.
I'll be honest: by the end of Day Three, I wasn't sure I could make it through a whole five days. And unfortunately, I was headed into the weekend, where I'd have less work to do and more temptation to use the internet.
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