Mid-sentence, I’d grab my phone. During vulnerable moments, my eyes would drift to the screen. I told myself I was just “multitasking,” but the truth was more uncomfortable: I was using devices to escape the intensity of real human connection.
After my relationship patterns began mirroring my phone patterns, I realized something profound: digital distraction isn’t just about technology addiction—it’s about presence avoidance.
Growing up learning to manage others’ emotions while suppressing my own, full presence felt overwhelming. The safety of checking out behind a screen was familiar and comfortable, while sustained eye contact and vulnerable conversation triggered my nervous system.
I began noticing specific patterns in my digital avoidance: unconscious phone grabs during emotionally charged conversations; mild anxiety when my device was out of reach; an automatic scroll reflex during emotional moments; multi-tasking to avoid vulnerable connection; and a strange urgency about notifications during intimate time.
What was I really avoiding? Discomfort with silence. Vulnerability in sustained eye contact. The fear of truly being seen. Anxiety about being fully present. An escape route from authentic intimacy.
The relationship cost became impossible to ignore: My partner felt unseen and unimportant. Our conversations lacked depth and completion. Emotional intimacy diminished gradually. Trust eroded through these micro-abandonments. The quality of our connection degraded systematically.
The transformation began when I realized my pre-digital self knew how to be fully present without constant escape routes. I created what I call “Pre-Digital Presence Practice”: placing phones in a different room during meals; making conscious eye contact without looking away; completing conversations without interruption; practicing comfort with silence; asking deeper questions without planning my response.
Specifically for dinner time—which had become a particular danger zone for disconnection—I established clear rituals: device-free meal times; full presence for at least 20 minutes; sharing one vulnerable truth with each meal; practicing active listening without mentally formulating my response; ending with some form of physical connection.
What surprised me most was realizing this wasn’t just about “phone addiction“—it was about nervous system regulation. Full presence requires a regulated nervous system that can tolerate the intensity of emotional connection. When I addressed the underlying dysregulation rather than just the symptom of phone checking, everything shifted.
The breakthrough came when I started treating phone-free dinners as presence practice rather than just another “should.” Building tolerance for sustained eye contact. Creating safety for real-time emotional expression. Developing comfort with the intensity of being truly seen.
Your partner doesn’t need your perfect responses—they need your authentic presence. And presence is a practice that can be rebuilt, one device-free dinner at a time.
Try this today: Notice when you reach for your phone during a conversation. What emotion might you be avoiding? Can you take a deep breath and stay present for just 30 more seconds? Small moments of presence build the capacity for deeper connection over time.
Remember: Your relationships deserve your full attention. Technology will always be there, but the moments for real connection pass quickly and can never be retrieved.
Let’s connect other ways too! Follow me here on Instargram @doctorrileysmith and at youtube @doctorrileysmith
Related Post:
From Self-Abandonment to Self-Discovery
The Hidden Connection Between Blood Sugar and Your Emotional Well-being

