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Find your Digital Balance

Welcome to Offline.Now - your place to create a healthy relationship with screens. We're here to actually make digital balance possible.

Personalized Digital Balance Score

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Personalized Digital Balance Score

See where you fit in our Offline Pivot Matrix

Personalized Digital Balance Score

See where you fit in our Offline Pivot Matrix
You meant to check one thing on your phone. That was forty-five minutes ago. Join Offline.now and the University of Toronto for Screen Life, a free Toronto Tech Week workshop on Thursday, May 28. Take a personal assessment, hear from a curated group of expert practitioners, and leave with a plan that fits your real life.
The debate about smartphones and mental health swings between alarm and dismissal. Both miss the real finding. The research is consistent on one thing: the phone is not the variable that matters. The pattern of use is. Here is what that distinction actually means - and how to use it to think more clearly about your own habits.
Your teen isn't weak, lazy, or addicted. They're responding exactly as their brain is wired to - and more often than not, what they're really feeling is overwhelmed. This piece explains the neuroscience behind teen phone use, why stress drives the behavior more than discipline ever will, and what parents can actually do about it.
There is a particular kind of tired that does not go away with sleep. If you end most days feeling flat, irritable, or hollowed out after hours of being digitally connected, that exhaustion is real, it has a cause, and it is not a personal weakness. Cleo Haber, MSW, RSW, explains the mechanism - and what your inner world is actually asking for.
You are not using your phone right now. But you are probably still thinking about it. That background alertness has a name, a mechanism, and a direct pathway to mental health decline - and it has nothing to do with how many hours you log on screen. Here is what the research actually shows about online vigilance, why stress is the real variable, and what that means for what you should try next.
Loneliness among young adults is rising - and the advice about what to do about it is heavy on app recommendations and light on evidence. A major systematic review offers a clearer picture: some digital approaches genuinely help, but the type and quality of interaction matters far more than the medium. Here is what the research actually shows.
Being available and being present are not the same thing. Most leaders know this abstractly. Far fewer have examined what constant digital availability is actually doing to their capacity for the second one. This is not a wellness argument. It is a leadership performance argument - and the evidence behind it is precise enough to be worth taking seriously.
You don't need to overhaul everything at once. This practical checklist gives parents eight small, consistent actions to take this week - from observing patterns before intervening, to protecting sleep, to co-regulating before setting limits. Start small. Stay steady.
Most debate about gaming addiction swings between alarm and dismissal. The research offers something more useful: a precise clinical distinction between heavy use and addictive use, measurable markers that tell them apart, and honest prevalence data that sizes the risk accurately. Here is what the evidence actually shows.