The world is changing fast and we are trying to catch up. The last 2 years have shown us a great deal of how things can change, how well we can adapt and what effects can arise due to these changes.
In the field of work, many things have changed for us all. Whether we work/worked from home, are working remotely, part of a hybrid team or we are working while travelling as digital nomads; for many of us it is a new exciting world of changing habits around how and where work is being done.
Several surveys have shown that while working from home or even remotely, it is common to lose the sense of time, as well as the sense of separation between work life and private life as both may have been happening in the same place. The lines dividing our work and rest became blurrier.
This blurriness comes at a time where we are more connected than ever! Your clients, or your boss can reach you anytime they want through phone, email and apps. A RescueTime study in early 2021, estimated that the average time a person spends on his phone is anywhere between 4 and 6 hours per day. These numbers have increased drastically in the last 2 years with the COVID-19 pandemic, that forced more people than ever to work remotely, thus depending more and more on digital connectivity and subsequently, spending more time on their devices.
All these factors have a toll on our physical and mental wellbeing. Feelings of burnout are now more common among employees and freelancers than before; stress-related auto-immune diseases are on an all-time high, mental health issues related to anxiety and loneliness are as common as headaches, and physical strain due to sedentary life or bad posture are soaring.
That’s why it’s important to strive to establish healthy habits now more than any other time. Now that we are adapting to new realities, it is the best time to build our new habits about our new work routines on a sustainable and healthy basis.
Digital wellness or digital wellbeing is a concept that developed due to the increased use of technology that can affect our general wellbeing. Excessive use of technology can cause mental health issues, attention issues as well stress and anxiety-related maladies.
The goal of digital wellness is to create a balanced and healthy relationship between us and technology, in order to mitigate or eliminate its bad effects on our health.
The world is now full of distractions, and if we want to maintain a work-life balance, we need to moderate our use of technology to avoid burnout and mental health issues. It will also help improve our work and self-satisfaction and productivity.
Achieving a good level of digital wellness is not without challenges. Keeping a balanced routine is not easy for digital nomads, when you have to constantly adapt to new environments. Staying in the present moment is also a big challenge; we spend 95% of our time using the subconscious mind that runs on autopilot, while as a digital nomad, it’s all about experiencing the present and being in the moment.
Here are some of the tips Tuba and I recommended to the audience:
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