99 Things to Do Instead of Scrolling Social Media

We’ve all done it—opened our phone for one second and somehow lost 45 minutes. Instead of quitting social media entirely, what if you just had better options? Here are 99…

The Unfortunate Dilemma

I, like many others, have taken a look at their phone’s screen time use and have been a bit shocked and/or appalled by the number that has appeared there. I’ve probably spent over an hour just staring at that screen (probably not helping my cause here).

As I was reflecting on the past year and looking at planning for the new year (click here if need help with doing that yourself), I wanted to try to tackle that screen time dilemma. Is it really that engrained in our lives?

It is a bit of a sad reality that 4 or more hours per day is being spent doodling on our cell phones. I know a good chunk for me is scrolling through Instagram reels, and honestly, without even any real intention.

I was watching Two and a Half Men with a close friend of mine and I really noticed, aside from the crude humor and stand-up job on casting Charlie’s love interests, the living in the moment that was still able to take place in the early 2000s. They had cell phones, they had TVs, and they had computers. But what they didn’t have the addiction associated with all of our modern iterations.

Now sure, it’s a television show. But the fact that it just appeared possible gave me hope. So with that being said, here’s a list of 99 things to do instead of scrolling social media:

The List

1. Take a long walk

2. Take a short walk

Moral of the story: go for a walk of some sorts.

3. Try cooking a new meal

4. Call a friend/family member

It’s crazy how quickly an hour or two can go by, depending on when the last time you’ve spoken with this person.

5. Go workout

6. Rearrange your apartment

7. Talk to ChatGPT

It knows a lot… maybe even too much.

8. Write down whatever’s on your mind

9. Learn an instrument

10. Play cards

11. Meet up with friend(s)

12. Watch a movie

We’ve gotten so far even from just consuming long-form content. Anything past a 60 second TikTok feels like a drag.

13. Clean your apartment

14. Sit and think

15. Listen to music

To take it a step up, listen to an entire album from front to back.

16. Listen to a podcast

17. Plan a vacation

18. Read a book

19. Read an article

20. Meal prep

21. Have a beer

I mean why not. Go to a local brewery or just stay at home.

22. Soak up the sun

23. Lie down in a park

24. Record a video

25. Learn a new skill

26. Meditate

27. Stretch

28. Catch up on work

29. Get ahead on work

30. Go grocery shopping

Whether you just went yesterday or haven’t gone in 2 weeks, I feel like there’s always something I can pick up. Or just pick up the ingredients for the recipe you’re trying.

31. Fix something

32. Revisit your finances

33. Read a magazine

34. Walk around the mall

35. Browse through an antique store

36. Read a blog

Hey, good idea.

37. Start a blog

Hey, another good idea.

38. Take a shower

39. Go thrifting

40. Take a class

41. Teach a class

42. Play video games

43. Make an elevated cup of coffee/tea

44. Do laundry

45. Clean up your email inbox

46. Revisit your ‘Notes’ app

47. Take some photos

48. Make a Spotify playlist

49. Plan a new morning routine

50. Do a puzzle

51. Prepare a thank you card

Always something to thank someone about. Get’s you thinking too.

52. Walk up some flights to stairs

53. Step outside barefoot

54. Rework your resume

55. Open a window and breathe fresh air

56. Clear up storage on your phone

57. Organize a drawer

58. Watch the sunrise

59. Watch the sunset

60. Take a drive

61. Go to the library

62. Send a thoughtful text

63. Plan a dinner

64. Clean your shoes

65. People-watch

66. Clean out your fridge

God knows you need to.

67. List out what your grateful for

68. Invent a joke

69. Review your calendar

70. Rough draft a business plan

71. Look at upcoming concerts nearby

72. Sit in a sauna

If you have the luxury of having access to one.

73. Do some pushups/squats

74. Make an ‘Excitement’ list

Write down what you are excited about!

75. Make an ‘Anxiety’ list

Write down what you are anxious about.

76. Cancel unused subscriptions

77. Sign up for a newsletter

78. Cold shower/cold plunge

79. Attempt a crossword puzzle

80. Change your bed sheets

81. Do a brain dump

Release what’s on your mind out into the world.

82. Iron your clothes

83. Visit a local coffee shop

84. Watch a documentary

85. Draw a picture

86. Watch the clouds

87. Learn a new language

88. Clean your car

89. Tighten screws

You’d be surprised how many you can find around your place that are loose.

90. Make a smoothie

91. Rearrange your desk

92. Drink a bunch of water

93. Look at homes on Zillow

94. Organize your kitchen pantry

95. Replace some lightbulbs

96. Build something

97. Organize your closet

98. Pray

99. Do nothing

When in doubt, always an option.

Conclusion: A Little Boredom is Okay

At the end of the day, this whole concept for this blog post might be a narrative on where our culture is these days.

Everything is instant, right there when we want, and when we can’t have a serotonin boost that second, we like to dismiss it. Hence, we resort to the fine world of doom scrolling and social media to give us our fix.

But it’s not just consuming content that has our attention spans all out of whack. Think about how anything past 2-day shipping on an online order feels like an eternity (thanks Amazon). Heck, they needed to implement a pitch clock in baseball to keep people watching.

While social media has its benefits and certainly does bring a large source of entertainment to us, we should be weary about the harmful nature and life-sucking properties it possesses.

The 1950s was no perfect time period to say the least, but I doubt we’d be able to survive as a nation today if we were left with 4 radio stations and a daily newspaper to keep us occupied. So even being able to have modern technology and conveniences, but choosing to not be so consumed in that digital world is a bit of a win.

Delayed gratification has become a desirable skill, simply due to the defaulting of instant gratification in our brain wiring.

So whatever it is you may do to use your time, be sure to stop and smell the roses (that can be interpreted both literally and metaphorically). A little boredom sometimes is good.

Oh, and maybe one more thing to do instead of scrolling social media—100. Keep writing your story.

—Will

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