I Blocked Social Media Feeds Without Deleting the Apps — Here's What Changed
I used to think the only way to beat social media addiction was to go cold turkey. Delete the apps. Nuke the accounts. Go live in the woods. But here’s the problem: I actually need some of these ap...

Source: DEV Community
I used to think the only way to beat social media addiction was to go cold turkey. Delete the apps. Nuke the accounts. Go live in the woods. But here’s the problem: I actually need some of these apps. My freelance clients message me on Twitter DMs. My dev community lives in Discord. Family group chats are on Instagram. Deleting the apps meant losing access to things that genuinely matter. So I tried something different. Instead of deleting the apps, I blocked just the feeds. The Feed Is the Problem, Not the App Think about it: when was the last time you opened Twitter to send a DM and only sent a DM? You didn’t. You scrolled the feed for 20 minutes first. Maybe 40. The DM took 30 seconds. The apps themselves are tools. The feed is the trap. It’s algorithmically designed to keep you scrolling, and it’s very good at its job. Once I realized this, the solution became obvious: keep the apps, kill the feeds. What Feed-Level Blocking Actually Looks Like Here’s what my daily workflow looks li