Comment by Ferret7446

Comment by Ferret7446 15 hours ago

6 replies

They still had clear boundaries. They slept in the sleeping place and at the sleeping time, they worked at the working place and at the working time. See, they didn't have smartphones to fiddle with in bed.

rootusrootus 15 hours ago

> they didn't have smartphones to fiddle with in bed

This is solvable for people who want to. We have a dedicated charging station in our house for all electronic devices. Before bed, all of those devices get put there. Including me and my wife's phones.

  • krferriter 13 hours ago

    This definitely is the way to do it. I have started keeping my phone in my living room at night instead of my bedroom, but am still bad about doing this every night. Phones are addictive and it is mentally hard to break out of the addiction. It is essentially a "you just have to do it" situation, but "just do it", while technically simple, is still difficult if you're addicted.

  • rTX5CMRXIfFG 9 hours ago

    How can you be contacted in case of an emergency in the middle of the night?

    • walthamstow 25 minutes ago

      I've made my peace with the tiny, tiny chance that I might miss my father's last moments because I didn't hear about his heart attack til the morning, for example.

      Living as if it might happen any time and I must be available for it is not healthy IMO.