The Data

A quiet revolution
is already underway.

Young people aren't waiting for an app to fix this. They're just logging off. Here's what the numbers — and the stories — actually say.

Be Part of It →
By the Numbers

The problem is real.
So is the pushback.

This isn't a niche wellness trend. It's a generational shift backed by data.

1 in 3

Gen Zers Deleted a Social App Last Year

A 2025 Deloitte survey of 4,000+ consumers found nearly a third of Gen Zers deleted at least one social media app in the previous 12 months.

Via CNBC ↗

Higher Risk of Depression for Heavy Users

Kids who spend more than 3 hours a day on social media face double the risk of mental health problems including depression and anxiety — and the average teen spends 3.5 hours a day on it.

U.S. Surgeon General ↗
50%+

Rise in Teen Depression & Anxiety Since 2010

Rates of depression and anxiety among U.S. adolescents were stable through the 2000s — then rose by more than 50% between 2010 and 2019. The same pattern emerged across the U.K., Australia, Canada, and beyond.

The Atlantic ↗
48%

Of Teens Say Social Media Hurts People Their Age

Nearly half of U.S. teens believe social media has a mostly negative impact on people their age — up from just 32% in 2022. The shift in attitude is accelerating.

Pew Research Center, 2025 ↗
40+

U.S. States Have Restricted Phones in Schools

40 states and D.C. have banned or partially banned phones from schools. Countries including Australia, Spain, Malaysia, and France have gone further with age-based social media bans.

CNBC, Feb 2026 ↗
2hrs

Per Day — The Global Average on Social Media

The average person worldwide spends over 2 hours on social media every day. That's nearly 15 hours a week, and over 6 years of a lifetime spent scrolling.

DataReportal ↗

The road to
logging off.

This shift didn't happen overnight. It's been building for years.

2018

The Mental Health Link Gets Documented

Research connecting smartphones to adolescent mental health starts piling up. Suicide rates for teens ages 10–19 are up 48% from 2010. For girls ages 10–14, up 131%. A study of 500,000 adolescents finds that heavy social media use tracks closely with depressive symptoms — which had been quietly rising since the early 2010s.

2019–2021

The Pandemic Accelerates Everything

Teen social media use rises 17% during COVID. Screen time becomes impossible to ignore. Parents, researchers, and governments start paying closer attention.

2024

The Evidence Becomes Undeniable

Jonathan Haidt's landmark Atlantic piece — "The Terrible Costs of a Phone-Based Childhood" — lays out the full case: depression up 50%+, suicide rates climbing, and a generation rewired by devices before they were ready. Social media companies face mounting lawsuits over addictive design targeting minors. The conversation shifts from "is it harmful?" to "what are we going to do about it?"

Late 2025

Countries Start Banning It for Teens

Australia becomes the first country to implement a sweeping social media ban for under-16s. Spain and Malaysia follow. France, Greece, Denmark, and others are working on similar restrictions.

Early 2026

The Quiet Revolution Goes Mainstream

CNBC reports on a surge of Gen Z and millennials choosing to log off voluntarily — not waiting for legislation or parental control. TikTok videos of people deleting apps, getting flip phones, and picking up vinyl go viral. A Deloitte survey confirms it: 1 in 3 Gen Zers deleted a social app in 2025.

Now

Spend Life Living Joins the Movement

We're not here to guilt-trip you or restrict you. We're here to make logging off worth it — with real rewards for real progress, from real Austin businesses who believe in the same thing you do.

You already know
you scroll too much.

Join the Waitlist →

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