7 Ways to stop procrastinating on social media

Dorothee Marossero
5 min readOct 6, 2021

And regain control, energy and … many years of your life!

6 years and 8 months. It is the estimated time spent on social media for an adult over a life. (Reference at footer)

I am not sure about you but I don’t want to spend 6 precious years of my life scrolling on social media. I want to actually live my life, not spend it watching a collection of well put highlights from others’ lives.

Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy social media for it enables me to connect with family members abroad, connect with my audience for my business, share a bit about myself too.

However lately, my social media scrolling habits have been a bit out of control. I have used social media a lot more in my business so I have ended up spending a lot more time on it, falling into those algorithmic traps that kept me going and staying on the platform longer and longer, but also distracting myself from feeling what I had to feel.

I have quite often felt really unsettled after leaving the space, reading posts and comments from people with very different opinions, observing the misunderstanding, witnessing the bullying and name calling… I have often left the space feeling dis-heartened, discouraged and sometimes even a bit hopeless. For the wish I have for humanity is for us humans to come to a place of true understanding of each other and love, despite the differences.

So I decided to limit my exposure to social media and be more intentional in my use of it. After just a few days, I managed to regain control, stop distracting myself, and truly felt a shift as my energy went back up.

Maybe if you are feeling a bit low these days, especially after having scrolled on social media, it is time to review your usage of it.

Here are a few practical and transformational ways to reduce and reclaim your social media usage:

1. Limit and schedule your time on it

  • Set a timer! Mine is set to 45 minutes per day on social media. You can go in your phone settings to set that up. Life changing.
  • Have a schedule, especially if your work involves posting on social media. Plan the moment where you will work on your social media strategy and execution. For me it is 2 hours a week, planning and scheduling my social media for the next 3 weeks.
  • Have a day a week free from social media. Try to make Sunday a “Social Media Free” day! Make it a family adventure! I love it. I actually often extend it to Sunday screen free day.

2. Disable all social media notifications from your mobile

  • Turn off all notifications from all your platforms: Facebook, Instagram, ClubHouse, Twitters… This is how the platform brings you back on it and keeps you there.

3. Buy an old fashion alarm clock for your bedroom

If your cell phone is your alarm clock, chances are you go to bed checking your social media and wake up with the same habits. Change that! Wake up with a breath of fresh air, a walk, a glass of lemony water, a gratitude practice, a hug to your partner, kids... See how it transforms your day.

4. Set an intention for your social media use

I think this is a bit overlooked. But what is your highest intention to sign up to those social media platforms?

My intention is to connect to friends, family that are far away. To connect with my audience for my business and educate, inspire and inform.

Therefore anything that goes against this intention is let go:

  • Clean up your account, take a break, unfollow whatever is misaligned to your intentions. At least for a while ( I am not all for creating a bubble of friends with all the same views and opinions, no I like having very diverse views of the world in my group, but if this is impacting your mental health right now, give yourself permission to take a break from the triggers, for a while, while you are getting back on track to a stable resilient mindset).
  • Stop the scrolling if you start feeling disconnected, frustrated or numb. See next point on how to!

5. Notice the time you come to social media for numbing — choose otherwise

This is the most important point.

Humans tend to fill the blank, the moments of silence, of solitude by distracting themselves with mind-numbing things like scrolling on social media (it could also be with food, TV, alcohol and other creative ways).

This is done to avoid feeling what is happening within, the beneath emotions, by fear of what we could find there: discomfort, pain… And by fear that we would not be able to handle the discomfort of that emotion.

Give yourself permission to observe what you are distracting yourself from. This is the key to stopping the behavior. And know that feeling, observing tthe emotions might not be as bad as you think.

Breathe, stop scrolling, listen, feel, and when you are ready let go.

6. Replace the time you spent on social media with the things that lift you up

Read a book instead of screen time, go for a walk, dance, sing, horse back ride, call a friend, move, do some yoga… anything that makes your whole mind body system vibrate!

7. Take a long break from it — a few days, a week, a month… whatever feels right

I am turning off regularly, going camping or holidaying with the kids or by myself. And I don’t know where my phone is during those times.

Time to disconnect to reconnect.

See how all those changes make you feel. And never look back!

Needing support in this intentional cultivation of higher states, let’s have a chat! Check-out our 12-week program, a mind body journey to discover and cultivate a higher state of being. www.fearlesslyyourself.com.

Dorothee Marossero Msc, MBA, NLP Master Practitioner, is a transformational coach, creator of Fearlessly Yourself and Dottyoga. She uses Neuro-Linguistic Programming, Yoga, mindfulness, somatic and self-care approaches to bring sustainable and deep transformation to women around the world.

www.fearlesslyyourself.com

Reference for social media statistics: https://review42.com/resources/how-much-time-do-people-spend-on-social-media/

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Dorothee Marossero

Transformational coach, International Yoga teacher and Reiki practitioner. I believe to heal we need to reconnect to our bodies, our emotions, our natural self.