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# 2025-10-12 - NoSurf: Stop Wasting Life On The Net
Recently i discovered nosurf.net. As always, i am late to the
party. I am posting this to my phlog to make sure the content
is represented in gopherspace.
The point isn't to never never surf the web again. It's about
liberation: being at choice in a relationship with potentially
addictive activities.
# Contents
* What Is Nosurf
* NoSurf Activities List
* See Also
# What Is Nosurf?
For some, NoSurf is a movement for netizens to self-regulate
compulsive internet usage. For others, NoSurf is a community of
people who are focused on becoming more productive and wasting less
time mindlessly surfing the internet.
It can be whatever you need it to be. Self control is an essential
skill that human beings learn, one that takes practice, and this
challenge becomes much easier with supportive communities
available.
We believe that the internet should be used as a tool to better our
lives rather than serve as a source of mindless distraction and
shallow entertainment.
NoSurf is essentially a community of people who are interested in
digital wellness. Whether you have a goal of being more productive or
feel you've picked up some bad digital habits, we are here to offer a
supportive space full of practical information and like minded
individuals to help you on your journey.
Our philosophy is one of healthy, mindful, and purposeful internet
use, so that our devices serve us--and not the other way around.
There are no strict rules--you decide how far you want to go and what
changes you want to implement. Our community is centered around
supporting each other to reach our own goals. The following is a list
of insights to get you started on your journey of transforming the
way you use the internet.
Essential Tips:
## Install Blocking Software
In the "Willpower Instinct," Kelly McGonigal, PhD writes about the
fact that willpower has been proven in scientific experiments to be a
finite resource. We can only exercise so much of it at any given time
and the amount is drastically impacted by common everyday occurrences
like tiredness, hunger, and stress.
If you have a goal to cut back on social media or overall screen
time, don't rely on pure willpower alone. Make sure to leverage and
take full advantage of software that's been engineered to solve this
problem.
## Community Effects Positive Change
The social aspect of lasting change is incredibly important. Research
has shown that surrounding yourself with like minded people has a
positive, increasing effect on your chances of success. *We are
social animals and are influenced greatly by the behaviors of those
we associate with regularly.*
Most of us won't be able to find many people in real life to talk to
about the kinds of digital issues we discuss here as NoSurf is still
relatively small and new when looked through a lens of global
proportions.
Fortunately we can meet and discuss advice, struggles, and solutions
with each other using the internet. Subscribing to this subreddit and
being exposed to other people's experiences feels like an
insignificant action, but is actually the first small step of what
could be a significant and lasting transformation.
## Get Inspired With Success Stories
Success stories are a powerful tool because not only do they contain
priceless, battle-tested gems of knowledge that have helped others
succeed, but they also subconsciously raise our belief about what we
consider to be possible for ourselves. Reading success stories gets
us excited and makes us feel like anything is possible. That's an
amazing state to be in, because we generate better ideas/actions from
that state than when we're slogging through the daily routine of life
in low-energy mode.
Stumbling across a success story is a pattern interrupt that makes us
stop and go: wait a second, maybe my life could be richer. If this
person succeeded, and we sure seem to have a lot in common,
/why not me?/
HTML Success Stories
## Fill Your Life With Fulfilling Activities
When newcomers first discover our community, one of the first
questions that commonly arise is *"If I stop mindlessly browsing the
internet, what am I going to do all day?"* It's a question that
illustrates just how dependent we've grown on the devices around us:
we have trouble fathoming what life would be like with out them.
Fortunately, there are countless answers to the question. There's a
whole world out there on the other side of our screens. It's a world
that won't give you instant short term pleasure. It doesn't appeal to
our desire for instant gratification. But what it does offer us is
worth so much more. Fulfillment, happiness, and meaning are within
your grasp, and the Activities List serves as a gateway into the
world in which they can be found.
## Reading Helps You Develop New Understanding
When you read NoSurf related books you form new neural connections in
your brain as you absorb the authors thoughts and insights. This new
understanding not only increases the quality of your thoughts, but
expands the set of potential actions you're now free to take. Reading
"The Shallows: What The Internet Is Doing To Our Brains" by Nicholas
Carr was a life-changing event for me and instrumental in my NoSurf
success because it exposed me to the world of neuroscience and helped
me understand what was happening to my mind. After reading the book
and absorbing the information inside, I was overflowing with new
ideas of things I could try to improve my relationship with the
internet.
## Recommended Books
* The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains
by Nicholas Carr
* Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of
Keeping Us Hooked by Adam Alter
* Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from
Each Other by Sherry Turkle
* Deep Work by Cal Newport
* The Willpower Instinct by Kelly McGonigal
## Have a Specific Goal: Why Are You Doing This?
An important thing to get clear on at the very beginning of your
journey is /why you're embarking on the journey in the first place./
*Why are you doing this?* Do you want to be more productive? Do you
want to be able to focus and get better grades? Do you want a greater
sense of mental clarity? Do you want to have more time for your
hobbies and passions? Do you want to get in shape? Spend more time
with your significant other/kids/family?
Answering this question is important because it enables you to
clearly define your why and lets you hone in on what your true desire
is. Desire and knowing your why are powerful forces and will help you
tremendously as you encounter challenges and setbacks during your
journey. Nietzsche touches on the essence of the idea:
/"He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how."/
## Get Leverage On Yourself
Human beings are driven by two primary forces: the desire to gain
pleasure and to avoid pain. Any time you act or fail to act, it is
because on some level, whether consciously or subconsciously, you
believed you would gain pleasure, would avoid pain, or both.
The important part is believed. At any given moment each of us has a
set of beliefs consisting of what we think will lead to pleasure and
what will think will lead to pain. One person believes consistently
working out will lead to ultimate pleasure and starts going to the
gym 4 times a week. Another person puts off going to the gym for
5 years because they associate the experience with pain.
Fortunately we have at our disposable the most powerful tool on the
face of the planet: human imagination. We can use our imaginations to
get leverage on ourselves and change our mental associations of what
we link to pain and pleasure.
In "Psycho-Cybernetics," Dr. Maxwell Maltz writes *"Your nervous
system cannot tell the difference between an imagined experience and
a 'real' experience."*
Your imagination gives you the ability to create mental pictures in
your head, and that ability is all you need to create leverage for
yourself.
Sit down in a chair, close your eyes, and fast forward 5 years using
your imagination. What does your life look like if you don't change
today? What opportunities do you miss out on? How will you feel
knowing you wasted so much time? Knowing you wasted your potential?
What will you look like? What will you feel like?
When you sit there imagining this, actually feel these feelings in
your body while making the connection that not-changing is going to
lead to significant amounts of pain.
Next imagine all the pleasure that's going to come from finally
taking control of your digital habits. If you could direct your
complete focus on your passions and goals without getting distracted,
procrastinating, or wasting time in the never-ending pursuit of
instant gratification, what would be possible for your life? Visually
imagine your life better related to the why desire from the earlier
section and feel exactly how you would feel in your body if you had
already made the changes and achieved what you desired. Doing this
repeatedly will make the connection that changing is going to lead to
lots and lots of pleasure.
This exercise will help you gain the leverage on yourself necessary
to succeed in making any major change of habit. *You succeed not when
you want to change, but when you must change, and not when you must
change "sometime" but... when you must change now.*
## Your Results Will Match Your Belief
> Whether you think you can or you can't, either way you are right.
> --Henry Ford.
This quote by Henry Ford illustrates one of the fundamental truths of
life: our beliefs determine our reality. Life will give you exactly
what you ask of it.
If you start this journey full of hope and expectation, believing you
are someone capable of change and are going to succeed, you most
likely will.
If you start this journey full of doubts, limiting beliefs, and a
bleak outlook on your own capacity of change, chances are *not much
is going to change for you. Not until you change your mental
conception of yourself and what is possible for you.* I can't
recommend "Psycho-cybernetics" enough:
> It is no exaggeration to say that every human being is hypnotized
> to some extent either by ideas he has uncritically accepted from
> others or ideas he has repeated to himself or convinced himself are
> true. These negative ideas have exactly the same effect upon our
> behavior as the negative ideas implanted into the mind of a
> hypnotized subject by a professional hypnotist. A human being
> always acts and feels and performs in accordance with what he
> imagines to be true about himself and his environment... We act, or
> fail to act, not because of "will," as is so commonly believed, but
> because of imagination. --Dr. Maxwell Maltz
## Mindset Is Everything
Will you treat each setback as a learning experience and opportunity
for personal growth? Or will you use each one to hammer negative
judgements on yourself and further reinforce the negative, limiting
beliefs you hold about yourself? If it's the latter, chances are
you're suffering from a fixed mindset. This is incredibly common and
is actually the result of the way our education system is structured
and lack of properly educated parents. If you want to succeed in your
NoSurf goals and in any other goals you may currently have or will
have in the future, *it's critical that you start adopting a
growth mindset as early as possible.* I highly recommend:
Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck Ph.D.
## The Self Compassionate Succeed
We've been brought up with the insane idea that being hard on,
overly-critical, and unforgiving of ourselves will somehow help us
get in line when we stumble and succeed/do the things we know we
should. The research shows that not only does this not help our
chance of succeeding, it actually reduces it. The right approach is
one of self-compassion, and I highly recommend reading the book
"Self-Compassion: The Proven Power of Being Kind To Yourself"
by Dr. Kristin Neff to anyone serious about accomplishing their
NoSurf goals as the journey is one of many stumbling blocks and
failed attempts, and *the attitude with which you respond to those
setbacks will make all the difference when it comes to succeeding or
failing to make lasting change.*
## Identify Unmet Needs and Address Them
Unhealthy internet habits might be a sign that you're using the
internet in an unsuccessful attempt to fill needs that are supposed
to be met in the real world. Maybe your life lacks novelty and rich
diversity of experience so you turn to the internet to get it
digitally. This is actually a bit of a catch-22 because you turn to
the internet as a result of your life being boring, but then your
life stays boring because you're always on the internet. Or maybe
deep down you crave love and intimacy and are trying to meet that
need by watching an ever-increasing amount of pornography.
Whatever your specific situation may be, it's worth it to take a few
minutes and reflect on whether your internet usage might be the
result of a subconscious attempt to meet deep, innate human needs
that aren't being met in the real world. This understanding alone
will be incredibly valuable, and hopefully it leads to new decisions
and actions to try to meet those needs in the real world like our
ancestors before us have for thousands of years. Hopefully the
NoSurf Activities List will be a good starting point.
## Professional Help
If you suspect you suffer from a serious medical-grade internet
addiction, the truth is that it's an extremely delicate mental and
emotional condition that 99% of us posting about more casual digital
wellness on this subreddit aren't trained to help you with. In our
wiki we have a short section of professional help resources that will
hopefully serve as a good introductory point for the research you'll
have to do before starting treatment with a trained professional and
getting better.
# NoSurf Activities List
When newcomers first discover our community, one of the first
questions that commonly arise is *"If I stop mindlessly browsing the
internet, what am I going to do all day?"* It's a question that
illustrates just how dependent we've grown on the devices around us:
we have trouble fathoming what life would be like with out them.
Fortunately, there are countless answers to the question. There's a
whole world out there on the other side of our screens. It's a world
that won't give you instant short term pleasure. It doesn't appeal to
our desire for instant gratification. But what it does offer us is
worth so much more. Fulfillment, happiness, and meaning are within
your grasp, and this list of activities serves as a gateway into the
world in which they can be found.
Naturally not every activity on this list will appeal to you or get
you excited. Instead of expecting this list to be perfectly tailored
to your interests, it's best to think of it as a source of
inspiration, and a symbol of possibility. It's a starting point from
which you'll be able to embark on your own journey of exploration,
growth, and learning to discover the activities that bring you joy.
# Awesome Hobbies
## Cooking/Baking
> Cooking is one of the strongest ceremonies for life. When recipes
> are put together, the kitchen is a chemical laboratory involving
> air, fire, water, and the earth. This is what gives value to humans
> and elevates their spiritual qualities. If you take a frozen box
> and stick it in the microwave, you become connected to the factory.
> --Laura Esquivel
## Writing
> You may tell a tale that takes up residence in someone's soul,
> becomes their blood and self and purpose. That tale will move them
> and drive them, and who knows what they might do because of it,
> because of your words. --Erin Morgenstern
Check out WritingPrompts for fun daily practice that helps you grow
and become a better writer.
## Reading
> There is more treasure in books than in all the pirate's loot on
> Treasure Island. --Walt Disney
Although commonly a solo activity, you can also look into joining a
local book club or starting your own.
## Dancing
> Dance is the hidden language of the soul. --Martha Graham
Look into dance schools in your area or start by following along with
one of thousands of tutorials on youtube.
## Tabletop Gaming
Participate in local game nights or start one.
Look into local boardgame cafes, libraries, MeetUp groups, etc.
Discord will have a lot of social tabletop and board gaming groups if
there's nothing in your area, and there are a vast amount of soloable
board games and tabletops.
## Language
> If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his
> head. If you talk to him in his own language, that goes to his heart.
> --Nelson Mandela
You can get started with Duolingo learning the language of your
choice.
## Learn to sing/play an instrument
> Few occupations pass the solitary hours more fruitfully than the
> playing of a musical instrument. --Stephen Hough
Look into getting lessons by a professional in your area or start by
learning online.
## Drawing/Painting
> I sometimes think there is nothing so delightful as drawing.
> --Vincent van Gogh
## Coding
> Everyone should learn how to code, because it teaches you how to
> think. --Steve Jobs
## Origami
> My origami creations, in accordance with the laws of nature,
> require the use of gemoetry, science, and physics. They also
> encompass religion, philosophy, and biochemistry. Overall, I want
> you to discover the joy of creation by your own hand. The
> possibility of creation from paper is infinite.
> --Akira Yoshizawa
## Calligraphy
> Calligraphy is a kind of music not for the ears, but for the eyes.
> --V. Lazursky
## Animation
> Animation means to invoke life, not to imitate it. --Chuck Jones
## Gardening
> The glory of gardening: hands in the dirt, head in the sun, heart
> with nature. To nurture a garden is to feed not just on the body,
> but the soul. --Alfred Austin
## Sewing
Make your own clothes and let your creativity roam free. The
possibilities are endless.
## Knitting/Crocheting/Embroidery
> Knitting is the saving of life. --Virginia Woolf
## Makeup
> Makeup is no different than clothes and accessories--it's
> embellishments for your face. And it also gives you creative
> freedom. You get to have that moment in front the mirror every
> morning and give yourself self-love. You're making yourself up
> beautiful, which is essentially self-love.
> --Michelle Phan
## Audiobooks
You can lay down on the bed or couch and relax while listening to a
good audiobook. Check with your local library to see if they have
audiobooks available (most do).
[Audio books are also good because they can be a group activity to
share with family while doing other activities such as crafting, food
preservation, etc.]
## Podcasts
Take anything you're interested (self-improvement, relationships,
sports, history, science, etc.) and you can be sure there's an entire
podcast on the topic.
# Indoor Activities
Choose from the many awesome indoor hobbies listed above.
If you have pets, maybe do something to treat them. Spend some time
playing with your cat, etc. whatever makes your pet happy, do that
for a while.
Plan your week/day and create goals you're committed to
accomplishing.
Catch up on laundry, cleaning, etc.
Catch up/study if you are in school.
Work on organizing/eliminating your belongings.
Work on a bucket list of things you'd like to do.
# Outdoor Activities
Restaurant hopping. This is basically a guided tour where you can try
out multiple restaurants in one evening.
Visit a nature park.
Visit a zoo/aquarium.
Visit a local farm and collect fresh produce on their fields for a
small fee.
Go swimming in a local (designated for swimming) lake, beach, or
indoors/outdoors pool.
Go to the sauna.
Visit some gardens. Some cities have amazing botanical gardens with
multiple greenhouses with exotic plants.
Visit an amusement/entertainment park (roller-coasters).
Go to see a movie at a movie theatre.
Go see a play at a theatre or go to an opera.
Visit a local planetarium and learn about the stars.
Take a guided tour of big city.
Visit a museum in your area. There is a wide array of museums; food
museums, computer game museums, art museums, historic museums.
Go pick up garbage in local parks, forests etc. Some cities have
groups and dates for this kind of stuff.
Go nature journaling. Grab a notebook, go outside, draw some plants
or other stuff you encounter.
Ride a bike. Many cities have some green areas with nice biking
paths. Maybe even mountain biking or dirtbiking?
Try geo-caching or Pokemon-Go.
See if there are any interesting events in your area--maybe a
festival, or a flea market, or concerts, or standup comedy, or poetry
slams.
Lay outside in the sun, just relax.
Offer to mow your elderly neighbor's lawn or help them in some other
way. This probably depends a lot on your neighborhood... Or mow your
own lawn.
Explore your town. Go into bookstores, antique shops, etc. Window
shop: you don't have to buy anything.
Take your dog swimming or to a field to run around in.
# Physical Growth
* Yoga
* Running
* Walking
* Hiking
* Zumba
* Cycling / Mountain Biking
* Weightlifting
* Bodyweight
* Crossfit
* Martial Arts
* Rock Climbing
* Recreational Sports
* General Fitness
Check on Meetup, your local gyms, and with your town to get more
information about joining a league/group (badminton, bowling,
racquetball, basketball, soccer, rugby, flag football, tennis,
volleyball, etc.)
# Mental Growth
## Meditation
> A man is but the product of his thoughts what he thinks, he
> becomes. --Mahatma Gandhi
* Read Mindfulness in Plain English
## Reading
> A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies... The man who never
> reads lives only one. --George R.R. Martin
## Journaling
* Diary, planning/goal-setting, activity scheduling, reflective
journalling, thought diaries
# Self improvement and continued learning
Visit the local library and check out some great books on any skill
you'd like to develop (they have it all).
Do some workshops at a local university or institute. They usually
take one day or an entire weekend. There are countless ones, going
from programming to game development and game jams, to cooking or
calligraphy or making your own fancy chocolates.
Look if the local school/university/organization has some interesting
(free/guest open) lectures. Especially non-profits often invite some
guest speakers for some interesting stuff.
# Giving back to your community
Visit your local animal shelter. Most of them need regular walkers
for their dogs. Sign up, and take a dog for a walk!
Look if your city has some opportunities to engage yourself
socially/volunteer. For many cities that means working with homeless
people or refugees/immigrants, helping kids do their homework and
give them additional tutoring, helping disabled people, assisting old
people with their groceries. Some even have opportunities to help
disabled and traumatized people have animal therapy with horses and
dogs, or you can help train dogs to become guide dogs etc.
# See Also
DIR Quit Shopping For Fun by FrugalGamer
HTML Unplugged: No Surf & Digital Minimalism
tags: counterculture,political,self-help
# Tags
DIR counterculture
DIR political
DIR self-help