Mindset · 5 min read

What 'unplugging' actually means.

The word has been worn out by wellness Instagram. Here's what it actually means operationally — and the specific moves that make it real, not aspirational.

Quick answer

Unplugging means: (1) the channels through which work reaches you are closed, (2) the systems that route work AROUND you are functioning, (3) you can verify (1) and (2) without checking. Most 'unplugging' fails at #2 — the routing isn't built, so the channels can't safely close. Build the routing, then the closure becomes possible.

→ The mechanical fix

Unplugging requires the routing being built first.

Without routing, closing channels just postpones the work. Build the routing first.

Build the routing →

What unplugging is NOT

These are gestures. They might help. They are not unplugging.

What unplugging is

A specific operational state with three properties:

  1. The work-reaching-you channels are closed. Email app uninstalled. Work phone in airplane mode. Slack signed out. Calendar invites blocked.
  2. The work-without-you systems are functioning. Routing is in place. Handlers know what they're handling. Decisions can be made without you.
  3. You can verify (1) and (2) without checking. Trust by reps, not by monitoring.

The operational moves

Close the channels

Uninstall email. Sign out of Slack. Don't 'mute' — close. Mute is a deferred decision; closure is a real one.

Build the systems

Routing layer. Primary + backup handlers. Designated decision-maker. Wake-the-owner criteria.

Trust the system

Don't check. Checking is the failure mode. The system was built so you wouldn't have to. Trust it by not checking.

How to know you've actually unplugged

Three signals:

// The substrate

Real unplugging needs an underlying system.

OutOfOfficePro is that system. 14 days free.

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