No Brawl? No problem.
First things first, I expected this to be way harder than it actually was. I was tasked with giving up some form of technology for a week, in the hopes of becoming more productive. Believe it or not, that actually ended up happening! (To an extent of course.)
As soon as I heard Ms. Cuttle say the words “Tech Detox”, I knew exactly what this meant for me. It meant I would be giving up Brawl Stars. Brawl Stars is a mobile game that me and many of my friends find super addicting. If you’ve ever walked past room 115 at lunch, you would’ve most likely heard a group of 10 or so teenage boys on their phones yelling at each other over some game on their phones. It’s basically become an epidemic. Me, along with my two friends Oscar and Jon started playing religiously about two months ago. Jon and I both got to top 1000 overall in Canada, with some of our characters reaching top 150 in Canada. For a game with almost 10 million players worldwide, that’s pretty impressive. Enough bragging though. I knew I had a problem when over the winter break I checked my phone usage and I was told I had logged 34 hours of Brawl Stars in the past week. That’s almost as much time as a full-time job. Spent on Brawl Stars. It’s almost like this assignment was meant for me.
Tuesday came along and I was feeling confident. I remember doing our learning strategies assignment a couple months prior and recalled how well that went for me. I exhibited crazy amounts of self control and became vastly more productive (See the blog post for more details!) I was ready for this detox, hopeful to cure my Brawl Stars addiction (for one week at least).
My first “lapse” came Tuesday morning at exactly 12:00 am, aka the second the detox was supposed to start. See, I was already playing at the time, and didn’t realize it was Tuesday, and then proceeded to play 3 more games before i DID realize it was Tuesday. So, I’m just gonna let this one go. It was 3 games (10 minutes at most?), I completed my punishment, and failing here had NOTHING to do with my lack of self control. It doesn’t count.
My first REAL lapse came that same afternoon at my friends house. I was feeling common withdrawal symptoms of not playing my favourite game, shakes, vision problems, dehydration, and loss of coordination. I was super bore. I just had to get my fix. After that one game, I decided that it would be the last one, and surprisingly, it was.
After that incident on Tuesday, I didn’t experience a single subsequent lapse. I still logged on to collect daily rewards and chat with friends, but I stuck to my commitment and didn’t play any matches. And like the learning strategies assignment, it was way easier than I could’ve imagined. I guess when I have some sort of motivation, like my marks for example, it becomes really easy for me to control my impulses.
So I didn’t play any more matches for the rest of the week! I don’t know how. I have the worst self control. I’m a chronic procrastinator (current time 3:19 am) and likewise, I play too many games of Brawl Stars based off the reason “why not”, when in the moment that I make this decision I can literally list millions of reasons why not to play a game of Brawl. Why these Self-control assignments are so easy for me are honestly beyond me.
I cut down my usage of brawl stars from almost 5 hours a day to around 10 minutes a day during this week. You’d think that with so much free time I’d actually get sh!t done, but that’s a very, very, VERY bold assumption. What really ended up happening was, instead of procrastinating with Brawl Stars, I, wait for it, procrastinated with other things! I finished season 9 of the Office, watched a whole bunch of YouTube, learned a new song on the Piano, the list goes on. So while I am very satisfied with how much Brawl Stars I was able to cut out over the past week, I’m not as satisfied with how I used all that extra time :p.













