Couverture de Field Report: Did Gray Scale Actually Stop My Doomscrolling?

Field Report: Did Gray Scale Actually Stop My Doomscrolling?

Field Report: Did Gray Scale Actually Stop My Doomscrolling?

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Last week I tested the internet’s favourite anti-doomscrolling trick:

turning your phone to gray scale (black and white).


The theory is simple: remove the bright colours that hijack your brain’s dopamine system and suddenly your phone becomes far less addictive.


Did it cut my screen time in half?


Well… not exactly.


But it did reveal some interesting things about how our brains react to colour, stimulation, and the endless scroll.


In this week’s Field Report we discuss:


  • Whether gray scale actually reduced my screen time
  • Why social media becomes weirdly less appealing in black and white
  • How the experiment accidentally pushed me into a ChatGPT rabbit hole
  • Why real life suddenly looked much more colourful and vivid
  • A brief “Have We Lost the Plot?” anthropology segment on humans and colour stimulation
  • The unexpected downside: trying to play phone games in grayscale


Plus:


Find of the Week

Appreciating colour again (and the joy of bold interiors)


Fail of the Week

Spending another two hours helping June solve a murder in June’s Journey





Links & Things Mentioned


Join the Actually Trying Book Club

👉 https://rosehoneymorgan.substack.com/freetrial


Lucy’s interiors Instagram

👉 https://www.instagram.com/lucycollierinteriors





Follow the Show


Follow the podcast so you don’t miss next week’s experiment.


If you enjoyed this episode, share it with a friend who is also trying (and occasionally failing) to reduce their screen time.





Next Week


Next week’s topic may or may not make brands even more nervous about working with me… but at this point the damage is probably already done.


See you then.

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