A 24-year-old Bay Area native has kicked off a social-media quitting movement thatโs starting to get global attention โ and yes, itโs called โAppstinence.โ
Gabriela Nguyen, who just graduated from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, says the idea came from a slow, personal realization that her phone was quietly taking over her life.
โIt wasnโt one big moment,โ she told KTVU. โIt was years of small steps, gradually realizing how much time I was losingโฆ the late-night scrolling, the lack of attention, the loss of connection with people around me.โ
Nguyen grew up in Silicon Valley โ in the belly of the tech beast โ and said that proximity made her rethink the lifestyle so many accept as normal.
โWhere I grew up, itโs all about the next big thing in tech,โ she said. โBut no one ever stops to ask: Is this good for us?โ
Introducing the 5D Method
Her movement, Appstinence, is built around what she calls the 5D Method โ a step-by-step process to help people finally cut ties with social media:
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Decrease usage
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Deactivate accounts gradually
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Delete apps after 30 days
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Downgrade your smartphone to something simpler
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Depart from social-media culture entirely
โSocial media apps are designed to take as much of your attention as possible,โ she said. โTheyโre literally selling your attention. And when you realize that, it becomes easier to walk away.โ
A Movement Thatโs Surprisingly Global
What started as a small Gen Z experiment has gone far beyond U.S. campuses.
โWeโve had people join from all ages โ teens, parents, even grandparents,โ Nguyen said. โWeโve held sessions in Nairobi, which still blows my mind.โ
Appstinence offers free resources, bi-monthly virtual meetings, and weekly coaching sessions hosted by Gen Z educators. Members swap stories, compare โdowngradedโ phones, and brainstorm ways to rebuild offline habits.
Reclaiming Real Life
For Nguyen, the mission is bigger than just quitting Instagram or TikTok.
โOur goal is to restore the fiber of the human experience,โ she said. โWe want people to choose technology that helps you matter to others โ and helps others matter to you.โ
Itโs a message resonating with people burned out on curated feeds, endless notifications, and algorithm-driven anxiety. And in a world that feels permanently glued to its screens, a movement telling people to take their lives back โ one deleted app at a time โ sounds downright refreshing.



