This post is a collection of three short essays on making smartphones better:
In-person Instagram
Killing Google
Cranium over calculatorĀ
In-person Instagram
Show your pictures to actual people
I have a vision.Ā
A future for our camera rolls.
Imagine thisā¦
What if we didnāt post Instagram pics to impress peripheral people? What if we didnāt need to present an image on Instagram to influence how others perceive us?
What if, instead, we did in-person Instagram?
We could come home from a trip or notable event, gather our families and real friends around the table at the end of a slow meal, and show them the pictures on our phones while telling them about the neat experience we had.
It would probably lead to laughter and conversation. It could even draw out memories and stories from your loved ones you had never heard before.
There would be no emoji replies nor fake comments that sound suave on the Internet. Weād eliminate the hollow feeling we get when something we post doesnāt hit the same number of likes and comments as our last post.Ā
Plus we could start snapping photos quickly instead of squandering the experience trying to take a perfectly postable pic.

Killing Google
Do stuff without checking Google first
Iām sick of googling everything before I do it.
Rather than just trying things and figuring things out, I consult Google on everything I do. There was a time when we didnāt have it and we used our brains to think things through. We experimented to figure out what works. We failed sometimes. But we learned from it. And we didnāt need to read blogs, how-to posts, and reviews for every little thing we did.
Instead of consulting Google, Iām going back to trying things in a way that makes sense to me.
Hereās a silly exampleā¦
Last week I had a bunch of birdās eye chili peppers in the fridge that were about to go bad. Rather than letting them rot, I decided to turn them into chili flakes. I picked up my phone and started to Google how to do it. Then I paused, put down my phone in disgust, and thought āAre you really asking Google how to do this? Isnāt this something you could figure out by yourself?āĀ
So I experimented by following my intuition. I washed and minced the chilis, put them in the oven for a long time at a low temperature to dry them out, and checked them every fifteen minutes to make sure they didnāt burn.Ā
They turned out wonderfullyā¦
Cranium over calculator
Use the bodyās innate capabilitiesĀ
I noticed myself reaching for my phone too quickly for simple tasks that Iām capable of doing if I slow down and challenge myself to do them.Ā
Take basic mental math.
I can add, subtract, multiply, and divide most whole numbers if I stop and think for a moment. When I rely on my calculator too much, I start to lose my math abilities. Now I challenge my brain instead of reaching for my phone right away and Iām slowly getting sharper with numbers.
We can do the same with other tools on our phones like maps.
If Iām going somewhere, Iāll look at the directions once, try to memorize where the place is, and then find my way there without consulting the map at every intersection.Ā
Iāve even started using my flashlight less by taking a minute to let my vision become dark adapted.
All these things take a few more moments than reaching for the simple solution on my phone, but using my bodyās faculties makes me feel more human and like Iām engaged with the real world, not a fake digital one.
Plus slowing down is one of the few real luxuries left in the modern world.
With love,
Subscribe for new essays every Thursday:
Thanks for reading!
1 ā Leave a like. Iād be grateful if youād consider tapping the āheartā ā¤ļø at the top or bottom of this page.
2 ā Letās chat. If this resonates or you want to share your thoughts, please leave a comment on this post. Iād love to hear from you and I respond to everyone!
3 ā Share the love. If you know someone who may enjoy reading this, please share it with them.
P.S. If you want to reach me directly, you can respond to this email or message me on Substack Chat.
Absolutely love the idea of in-person Instagram. Iāve been off for 3+ years now and enjoy sending unremarkable yet meaningful photos to people I actually want to show. Your idea of making it a community event is super appealingāalso reminiscent of family game night or going to the movies with friends. Sure, maybe not the most āefficientā use of time, but so much more valuable than tossing another photo into the void. Thanks for the article, man !
...not novel by any means but we print an annual photo calendar for family and friends and it is well received...fun to curate also...sometimes print photo books for eachother too on topics (like our dogs)...feels gross to say this but a smart table for your photo idea could be cool...everyone gather around and make a collage...