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You Are Not an Emergency Contact for Everyone’s Feelings

Read Time: 5 min

The Phone Made Everyone Feel Entitled to You

There is a strange little violence in being constantly reachable.

Not dramatic. Not cinematic. Just the soft daily theft of having your attention treated like public property.

A text arrives. A DM lands. A voice note waits. A work message slips in after hours with the casual audacity of a raccoon in a silk robe. Suddenly your body moves before your values do. You tense. You check. You answer. You reassure. You become available because availability has started cosplaying as love.

But being reachable all the time is not the same as being present.

Sometimes it is just obedience with notifications.

Constant Access Is Exhausting Us

The APA’s Stress in America survey found that “constant checkers,” people who compulsively monitor email, texts, and social media, reported an average stress level of 5.3 out of 10. People who checked less frequently came in a full point lower. The same research found that workers overwhelmingly value employers who respect the line between work and nonwork time. Translation: people are tired of being digitally summoned like staff.

And still, we feel guilty when we do not respond quickly.

We worry we seem cold. Selfish. Unavailable. Difficult. We confuse a delayed reply with abandonment. We confuse a boundary with bad character.

But boundaries are not a rejection of connection.

They are the conditions that make real connection possible.

Availability Is Not Intimacy

Here is the part that may sting: some people do not want your presence. They want your access.

They want the immediate reply. The emotional processing. The free therapy. The reassurance on demand. They want to drop their anxiety into your lap and walk away lighter, without asking whether you had room to hold it.

Sociologist Arlie Hochschild named this kind of unpaid work in The Managed Heart: emotional labor, the work of managing your own feelings so someone else can feel better. She was writing about flight attendants and bill collectors, but the dynamic travels. We just did not expect it to follow us home and demand a reply by morning.

And maybe you have trained people, gently, accidentally, lovingly, to believe this is fine.

That does not make you wrong. It makes you human. Most of us learned connection through performance: be easy, be responsive, be useful, be low-maintenance, be good. Answer quickly. Smooth it over. Do not make people uncomfortable by having limits.

But there is nothing intimate about becoming a 24-hour help desk for everyone’s emotional weather.

The Luxury of Being Unreachable

Unreachability has become a kind of luxury now.

Not because it always requires money, though sometimes it does. Because it requires self-trust.

It asks you to believe the world will not collapse if you answer later. That people who love you can survive your limits. That your worth does not depend on how quickly you make yourself useful.

It is not lost on governments, either. France encoded the right to disconnect into labor law in 2017, recognizing that constant digital availability is not a personal failure. It is a system design workers deserve protection from. France put a law around it. You can start with a mute button.

Jenny Odell, author of How to Do Nothing, argues that paying attention to one thing is, by definition, an act of resistance against everything else competing for it. The attention economy, every app, notification, and guilt-trip dressed as a DM, is designed to make that choice feel impossible. Reclaiming your attention is not antisocial. It is the price of having a life you can actually feel while you are living it.

Where your attention goes, your life follows.

So yes, mute the group chat. Turn off read receipts. Let the email wait. Put the phone in another room while you eat. Stop apologizing for responding when you actually have capacity.

That is not rude.

That is rhythm.

How to Set the Boundary Without Making It a Whole Trial

You do not need a press release for every limit.

Try simple language:

“I’m offline tonight, but I’ll respond tomorrow.”

“I care about this, and I do not have the capacity to talk through it right now.”

“I’m not available after work hours unless it is urgent.”

“I need time before I reply thoughtfully.”

No over-explaining. No courtroom defense. No decorating the boundary with so much apology that it collapses under the weight.

The right people may need to adjust. They will not need you to bleed out your nervous system to prove you care.

Take This With You

Being less available does not make you less loving.

It makes your yes cleaner.

It makes your presence more honest.

It gives your nervous system a chance to stop living like every notification is a small emergency. It lets your relationships become something better than constant access: chosen attention.

“Freedom is not something that anybody can be given. Freedom is something people take, and people are as free as they want to be.”

James Baldwin

Nobody is going to grant you the right to be unavailable. Nobody is going to hand you permission to let the phone ring. You take it. Or you don’t. Protecting yourself is not a vibe. It is a discipline.

You are allowed to be kind without being constantly reachable.

You are allowed to love people and still let the phone ring. You are allowed to come back to yourself before you answer the world.

Check Out the Podcast.

If you like what you’re reading here, you’ll love hearing it unfiltered. The Selfish Mode podcast takes these ideas off the page and into real talk—raw, unapologetic, and made to hit different in your ears. It’s the same spirit of self-ownership, but louder, messier, and more alive. Tune in when you’re ready to stop scrolling and start feeling.

View PODCAST EPISODES

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