What The Shift
You've heard it a thousand times — put your phone down, be more present. But what if the phone isn't actually the problem? Dr. Kristin Ruane is a Board Certified Behavior Analyst with over 20 years of experience and a PhD focused on how parental smartphone use impacts language development in children. Her research took her into families' homes for six months, recording what actually happens to communication when a parent picks up their phone. What she found should make every one of us uncomfortable. In this conversation, Kristin breaks down what's really driving our phone use — and it's not what you think. We get into the science of behavioral addiction, why the "just put it down" advice fails, and what her research revealed about the moments we're losing with the people right in front of us. She introduces the dislocation theory of addiction and makes a compelling case that our scrolling habit is a symptom of something much deeper — disconnection, isolation, and a nervous system that's completely overstimulated. We also talk about why screen-free zones aren't enough, what phone zones and phone times actually look like in practice, the difference between functional and ritualistic phone use, and why the cognitive load of your phone is fundamentally different from folding laundry. Whether you're a parent, a partner, or just someone who picks up their phone 80 times a day and wonders why — this one's going to challenge how you think about that device in your hand. Dr. Kristin Ruane is the author of Finding Victoria and host of the podcast Fuck Your Phone. Find her at KristinRuane.com
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