by Brad Bollenbach

Crack Addict

Information is not knowledge.

– Albert Einstein

I have a confession to make: I’m a crack addict.

On the information black market, my drug of choice goes by the name of email. The good stuff is laced with social media and RSS. The better stuff also includes mailing lists, website statistics, IRC, and 500 TV channels. The best stuff adds both Facebook and MySpace accounts, instant messaging of every kind, and a pony made from Ajax.

My dealer calls himself Unread. I caught a glimpse of his driver’s license once though, when his wallet spilled all over the ground while we were shooting up in an airport lounge. Turns out his real name is Unimportant Bullshit. That’s a pretty funny name, when you think about it.

But I haven’t thought about it. I’m usually too strung out to notice. I just keep buying more product.

How much do I buy? Well, it’s available only by the truckload, even though you have to squeeze it into your veins with that measly little needle called your attention span. This is less than convenient. I’m stocked for at least the next three U.S. presidencies. Come to think of it, that might be a good thing.

Oh, and another oddity: My dealer won’t take cash. He demands that I pay him only in Yeses:

Do you want more email? Yes.

Need another hit of RSS? Yes.

It’s been 10 minutes since you last checked your visitor count for today. Aren’t you going to see if it’s been updated? Yes.

There’s poker on TV right now. Shouldn’t you be watching it? Yes.

How’s about checking if there’s anything interesting on the reddit front page? Yes…master.

But I haven’t even mentioned the worst part: version 2.0 of this drug is coming out soon, and apparently it must be administered anally.

I used to be the consumer. I’m now the consumed.

It Can Happen to You

This (mildly exaggerated) description of my own dependence on unimportant information is not uncommon. But why does it happen? When you drill down to the deepest layers of information addiction, what do you find?

You might have thought you hit bottom when you saw chunks of job disinterest, aversion to boring tasks, and a substance resembling Nothing Better To Do. But a few inches below that, you find the real crust wrapped around the core of an information junkie: Fear. Fear of failure, fear of success, fear of rejection, fear of life itself.

The beauty of aimless internet reading, linguistically graceful internet flame wars, and social media popularity contests is that you can’t fail at them. Even if engaging in these activities causes you to fail at whatever you were supposed to be doing, you can just blame it on all that wandering around the Web 2.0 theme park. It certainly sounds a lot better than, “I tried everything I could to fix this bug, but I still can’t figure it out.” And it’s way easier to just drag your feet through the mud known as your Day Job (TM), than to risk giving your notice and heading off into the unknown in search of a better life.

Information is an analgesic. It not only dulls the pain involved in actually Getting Shit Done, but if you do it right, it actually feels like you’re doing something, instead of avoiding doing something.

My Story of Addiction

I’m exaggerating my information addiction slightly. After all, every man, woman, child, and fetus has a Facebook account, but I don’t. I’m not on MySpace either. I don’t do instant messaging at all, except to talk to paying clients on software consulting gigs. And while I’m usually found on IRC, I rarely pay attention to it.

But I’d be lying to pretend that I don’t throw a few balls down the gutter every now and then. My most recent slip-up came about a month ago, when I ordered Food Network as a way to help me learn cooking.

What started off as awe and admiration at Jamie Oliver’s ability to create amazing dishes from fresh ingredients grown right in his own backyard, morphed into an interest in Australian Open tennis and World Matchplay Darts. Oh, and what’s that? A documentary series on sex workers in California? And lookie here, it’s even running right after Poker After Dark on another channel. How convenient!

The distraction began with TV and, as my brain started getting accustomed to idleness, snowballed into other non-activities. Before I knew it, I was spending entire days swinging from one vine of useless information to another.

The Solution

The irony of information overload and addiction is the sheer volume of information available on these topics. For example, when I Google for “information overload”, I see over 1.5 million matches.

My solution to dealing with this mess is what I call a 30-Day Information Fast.

You’ve probably already heard the term “Low-Information Diet”, popularized by Tim Ferriss. As the name implies, an Information Fast takes things a step further. The key behind this solution is to completely cut off all attention-draining inputs with no exceptions, but to do so for only a limited period of time. The point of total withdrawal is, obviously, to reclaim the time and attention lost to unnecessary diversions, but also to help you discover which of those things are actually important to you. You’ll know you gave up something important when you keep wanting to reach for it to help you solve a problem you’re working on, or when, even after a full 30 days without it, you’re eager to catch up on what you missed.

The rules during the 30-Day Information Fast are as follows:

  • No blogs. No reading RSS feeds nor any direct visits to blog websites.
  • No TV. Not one second of the boob tube is allowed.
  • No social media sites. My only exception will be for submitting my articles, if applicable. Sometimes you guys beat me to it, which is always appreciated.
  • Check email only twice per day. I’m not going to hardcode the times when I’ll be checking email, but it must be no more than twice, unless absolutely necessary.
  • No Facebook, MySpace, or instant messaging. This is a non-issue for me, but I know a few people for whom this alone would add years to their life. Feel free to also include IRC here, if it eats up a lot of your time.
  • Check web stats only once per day. I’ll bet almost every blogger has been bitten by the stats demon at some point. I’m no exception. I’ve had days where it seems like all I’m doing is following my stats.
  • No internet forums. There’s currently only one forum I read regularly. Still, I’d like to see what happens when I pull the plug on it for a while.
  • No mailing lists. Another non-issue for me, but it’s not hard to imagine that some people will benefit greatly from turning off this fire hose.
  • Exceptions. DVDs, books, magazines, music, all social activities, conferences, seminars, user groups, and, in the interests of self-preservation, this blog. This 30-day trial takes aim at attention-draining inputs. I usually consider these exceptions to be a solid use of my time.

Feel free to tweak this list to suit your needs, in particular by adding things that I haven’t mentioned, but which affect you. If you want to remove things from this list because you “can’t live without them”, that’s a sign that you’re probably cheating. :)

Of course, I’m still going to publish new content during this time. In fact, this 30-day trial is intended to improve my chances of attaining my goals for expanding the quality and reach of my writing over the next month.

This challenge is not particularly meant to extend beyond the 30 days. It’s merely an attempt to create a space in which to think deeply about your life and your purpose, to replace distraction with action, and to let the truly meaningful uses of your time bubble up to the surface of your attention.



Comments
  1. jlg says:

    I took similar attempt. But in my case it is – no Internet connection at home. In such a situation you start to discover that most of the time you used to spend surfing was wasted. Give it a try.

  2. I work from home, so this isn’t an option. But I can see this being a useful extreme for people that work not-at-home. Interesting idea.

  3. Joyce says:

    This is great! I’m guilty of this on all charges. I’ll try it, but Facebook might be really hard to eliminate since my friends use it instead of email :S

  4. Dave says:

    I’m going to give most of this a try. I’m going to try to cut Facebook down to once or twice a day, because as the above commenter, my friends use it exclusively as a replacement for email.

  5. Jpop says:

    I love the writing of the intro to this post. Very nicely written.

  6. [...] Overcoming Information Addiction “On the information black market, my drug of choice goes by the name of email. The good stuff is laced with social media and RSS…” [...]

  7. Snigel says:

    How interesting. I read a similar post somewhere else, cannot quite remember where, and analysed my own situation. I am not running a thirty-day project like this, but I have made a similar list which I intend to follow daily.

    What I have done is assess each source of information and determine how important or urgent information from that source is. Then I have assigned to the source how often I will check it. Two examples:

    E-mail: Perhaps most important of all, I need to check it fairly often to get informed of changes in schedules and things like that. I check this twice every day (like you do).

    Webstats: I check my website stats only once a week. Why do you want to check it once a day? I like to keep track of activity and to be aware of how people reach my site, but seriously, that kind of information can be obtained equally adequately once a week, or possibly even more infrequently.

    Also, I never watch TV, which is a big time saver.

    Also like you, I have a group of exceptions which are not draining my focus, but consists of things I would rather do more, not less. Reading books and meeting people socially are two examples, but I am fairly finical about those as well, nowadays. Hm… I ought to write something coherent about that, but it is big enough for an article of its own, so I will not take it here. :)

  8. elai says:

    Can you have a printable version of your blog that excludes the side bar & and other navigational things and lets the article take the full width of the page vs. a narrow column? Thanks.

  9. Michael says:

    elai, if you use Firefox as your browser, try this extension: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/4111

    It allows you to separate certain elements of the page and view only those, such as separating the article from the sidebar, viewing only the article.

    This is a good article. I’ve slowly been cutting down my useless web time, but some things I really couldn’t imagine going without. At the very least I have to check things like Facebook daily, in case someone actually has something important to say :).

  10. T. says:

    I have a similar problem, except my drug of choice is old-school: books. Problem is, since I blog about interesting books I read, I worry if I cut back on my information addiction my blog will suffer.

  11. @T:

    Are books your only timesink?

    I’ve noticed that the 30-Day Information Fast has eliminated several time leaks for me that were perhaps even worse than I realized. The result has been lots of time for reading AND other activities.

    I also find that, especially with personal growth books, I have to be doing much more than just reading them to be getting anything out of them. The amount of action you’re taking as a result of lessons learned from a good book should necessarily limit how much reading you can squeeze in every month.

  12. Raj says:

    Very nice article and a very nice blog, glad I found it, got a shot of your RSS feed as well, feels nice, going to read your earlier posts some time in the future now….

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  14. nomaddict says:

    “But a few inches below that, you find the real crust wrapped around the core of an information junkie: Fear. Fear of failure, fear of success, fear of rejection, fear of life itself.”

    My problem with information is that i seem to be needing more and more before I step out in the abyss. For instance, my jobhunt is being plagued by my needing to check the latest article by some career expert and I spend all day trying to learn about how to job-hunt instead of actually doing the job-hunt. As you mentioned fear as at the core of this addiction. my job-hunt has taken much, much longer than would have imagined. I listed as my goal, landing a job by month’s end. I believe that the 30-Day Information Fast will definitely take me in the direction I need to be going and help me spend time on learning Spanish and how to type!

  15. I ended up getting vacuumed in by Facebook last night. I got a contract to build an app on their platform. It came down to either signing up or saying no to an interesting software gig.

    I could have registered an anonymous account, but I can actually imagine there being useful possibilities for getting and keeping in touch with people, as long as I don’t overdose.

  16. Jose says:

    I work from home and found that I was wasting lots of my day browsing for news, cool blogs (like this one), checking my social networks, etc.

    What I did was to set up my router to block the internet between certain hours, but allow email (I communicate with clients often throughout the day with email).

    What I had found was that I’d be working on a report in Word and, if a thought or question came to mind such as “I wonder how the Democrat leadership race is going?”, I would automatically and open a browser window and be watching CNN videos, reading op-ed blogs, reading about polls, etc. without me even being aware of it.

    After I blocked the internet during working hours I would find myself trying to work then all of a sudden I’d be woken up out of my trance by the browser window saying ‘Page Cannot Be Found’ or something like that. I was surprised at how much of a habit this was because I consciously knew I had no connection but would instinctively open a browser window anyway.

    I still struggle with my information addiction but I’m working on getting more disciplined. I want to set a time for work and a time for recreational surfing. I want to make it a habit.

    Thanks for the post and your blog, I found it tonight and will be checking it regularly in the future.

  17. Alex Top says:

    Great article. Definately usefull. Thanks a lot to the author.

  18. [...] made free, although I’d bought it a couple of years ago) and came across the quote in a post on overcoming information addiction on 30 [...]

  19. [...] was also an interesting blog post about what I came here to write about, although the author took a little bit more of a literary approach to the description and [...]

  20. Darrin says:

    I sat down this morning to write a blog post about why I thought I might have an addiction to information and the internet. First thing I did was search for Information Addiction on Google and there was your post. I quoted you in my post so I hope you don’t mind.

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts on a situation very similar to mine.

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  22. Mae says:

    “The distraction began with TV and, as my brain started getting accustomed to idleness, snowballed into other non-activities. Before I knew it, I was spending entire days swinging from one vine of useless information to another.”

    That makes me laugh…I am often aimlessly swinging from vine to vine, and then I look at the clock and feel remorse.

  23. Ryan Steezy says:

    this article was great! information is like food, if you eat junk non-stop you’ll die an early death and have regrets.

  24. [...] The internet is the single biggest waste of my time, followed closely by TV, and I am going to do something about. This idea was inspired by the book 4 Hour Work Week, by Tim Ferris, and the blog 30 sleeps. [...]

  25. sandrar says:

    Hi! I was surfing and found your blog post… nice! I love your blog. :) Cheers! Sandra. R.

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