A Case Against Notifications

How push alerts can lead to ‘headline stress disorder’ and what to do about it.

Dr. Jenny King
5 min readDec 3, 2021
Photo by Adrian Swancar on Unsplash

The average smartphone user in the United States receives 46 app push notifications per day. Forty-six interruptions as we go about the business of being human. Working, caring, connecting, moving, resting. These micro-moments take our attention, our intention, and in many cases, our ability to think rationally and replace them with stress hormones.

And even though we may not want to check them, we may not mean to click on them, we often do. They can be very hard to ignore.

I’m sure you’ve seen it. You’ve probably done it. You’re sitting with someone, in the middle of a conversation, when a sudden glow or ping draws both sets of eyes to the phone sitting on the table next to them.

“Oh no,” they whisper, as they begin to scroll.

You grab your phone to hop onto whatever app might provide you with the update they just saw.

So you’re both, now, operating from the more reactive, primitive parts of the brain, rationality out the window. Hearts racing, muscles tense. And anyway, what was it you were talking about in the first place?

Of course, we need to be aware of what is happening in the world around us. We need to…

--

--

Dr. Jenny King
Dr. Jenny King

Written by Dr. Jenny King

Mother. Social Work Educator. Consultant. Writer. Unschooler. Trauma-Informed. @drjennyking

No responses yet