Admit it. You’ve already checked your emails today, right? Even on a Sunday, we’re enslaved by two little words, 11 letters in total: Send/Receive.

Who ya gonna not call when you turn your phone off?

On Wednesday, one Australian university will begin to fight back. Alarmed by a doubling in employee grievances and email-induced stress among her colleagues, Notre Dame University vice chancellor Celia Hammond has introduced a voluntary email-free scheme one morning a week.

Yes, voluntary: Prof Hammond initially suggested a compulsory three-hour shutdown, but the staff revolted - presumably via email.

“While everyone agrees email is an incredibly useful tool, it isn’t accompanied by eye contact, body language or facial communication – and has a higher likelihood of being misinterpreted,” Professor Hammond says.

“Sometimes you need to really think, to reflect on something, and the constant emails are very distracting.

“I’ve got staff who fear going on holiday, too, because of the mountain of emails that will be waiting on their return.

“My hope would be that, in due course, this ‘email free’ time becomes an occasion which staff look forward to each week.”

Emails are easy, they’re fast and they’re effective. So why are they’re making us obsessive, unproductive and inefficient?

I can spend hours, even days, doing nothing but responding to emails, kidding myself that I’m busy when in reality most could be tackled with a quick phone call and deleted.

Research coming out of the US in the past decade suggests instant communication is leading to compulsive behaviour; it’s upping our stress levels (constantly checking emails apparently keeps our minds on ‘high-alert’); and it’s overloading us with more information than our poor non-computerised brains can handle.

And all this, ultimately, is making us less - not more -  productive. No wonder there’s a trend towards email-free days in America.

Adelaide psychologist Angie Willcocks says 24/7 access to emails is most definitely causing stress among employees who feel constantly compelled to check messages and guilty if they don’t respond immediately.

And that WIFI wonderment we all felt at being able to go online anywhere, any time, is quickly being replaced with a dreaded feeling that we’re slaves to work everywhere and all the time.

“Let’s say it’s a Sunday morning and you use your smartphone to check your emails - in 0.4 seconds you see a job that you’ll need to get stuck into when you get to work tomorrow,” Ms Willcocks says.

“That email could easily have waited until Monday morning, but instead of having a lovely Sunday with the family you spend all day stressing.”

Ms Willcocks says some families eager to restore work/life balance are banning phones at night and on weekends, “or even just for an hour at a time”, to end the compulsive checking.

“It’s inevitable that people will increasingly start to turn off from this constant communication - it’s unsustainable.”

The curse of the email is not limited to mental health, either.

Nadine Schultz, a physiotherapist from Uraidla in the Adelaide Hills, says a spike in “texting thumb” complaints a few years back has been replaced by neck, shoulder and upper-back strains caused by excessive use of iPads and tablets.

“Everyone’s sitting on the lounge with their heads bent over their iPads and no forearm support - it’s really bad for posture, and women seem especially susceptible.

“Anyone using a tablet for more than 15 minutes should really be sitting at the kitchen table, resting their forearms to take the load off their shoulders.”

So, on this lovely Sunday, will it be Send/Receive or Switch off/Get a life?

Professor Celia Hammond says she hopes her trial will “reminds us all ... that email is a communication tool that should not rule our lives and needs to be handled with care”.

Certainly pushes my button.

Comments on this post close at 8pm AEST

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15 comments

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    • acotrel says:

      06:25am | 16/09/12

      ‘The system runs on bullshit’, and computers only facilitate that ! The big thing that affects mental health is the work of disingenuous control freak sociopaths.-  Often promoted to their jobs because of their bullying attributes.  They would have to be the biggest purveyors of negative influence on productivity.

    • TimB says:

      09:23am | 16/09/12

      So THAT’s how you ended up in a management position.

      It all makes sense now.

    • acotrel says:

      06:28am | 16/09/12

      Ever thought what a global response to an email which was a ‘bit off’, would do in a large organisation ?

    • Jones says:

      07:06am | 16/09/12

      Does the same rule apply for reading website blogs this early on a Sunday morning?

    • NESLIHAN KUROSAWA says:

      08:49am | 16/09/12

      Hi Lainie,

      Does this actually mean that we are all becoming a society of workaholics?  Or it has more to do with having latest Ipads & Iphones to look just cool in public places as well as our private lives?  I only wanted to know if owning state of the art items such as Ipads,  could also be seen as if   we are making the all right fashion statements by wearing designer labels? 

      There is no arguing the fact that the latest tablets and phones make our working and personal lives so much easier !  And there is such a thing as business lunch and dinner? And as well as having a distinct line between our working and personal lives with time allocated for leisure and fun!

      However I also wonder what ever has happened to the idea of doing work the old fashioned way during work hours? And if we are far too concerned for our productivity and general performance, then should we be socializing and be seen in public places with our prized most possessions such as Iphones and Ipads?  Or is it simply another smart trick or method used by the media , conveying the strong message that we don’ t exist and function normally without these all important items decorating our lives? 

      Lately we are also noticing more young children and students becoming hooked on those as well?  Does also that mean that we are becoming a society of high achievers seen by others as doing a lot of of work?  Or is it another way of looking busy and more important? Or could it also be about our all important self image?  Kind regards to your editors.

    • maria says:

      08:53am | 16/09/12

      Slaves to our devices, and it’s beginning to fry our brains.

      “It’s inevitable that people will increasingly start to turn off from this constant communication - it’s unsustainable.”

      Slaves to our political parties and the servants of the people in our serfdom, and it’s beginning to fry the majority of the people to be unrelated and irrelevant in every debates and decisions with the exception of the so-called servants.

      “It’s inevitable that people will increasingly start to turn off from this constant communication - it’s unsustainable.”  under our strict and stringent regime of tolerance.

      Who are the ones who are obsessive to control our money and are unproductive and inefficient in every department when our debt is going up by the second ?

      Who are the ones who let them fry our brains when we have the tools to stop it ?

      Are we really the clever and knowlegeable country as told by our master servants ???

    • Jack Wright says:

      10:17am | 16/09/12

      This is simply a matter of personal choice. Surely we can ask our many admirers to put their 5-lines into written messages and posting them with a stamp. But it is the deep, visceral, psychopathic loneliness we express, like on the little portable phones that “prove” to us that we exist and we have friends who love us, even if we and they have nothing to say to each other, but then again…here I am again talking to something called “Punch”.

    • Sickemrex says:

      11:31am | 16/09/12

      The work email system in my organisation isn’t accessible from anywhere but work computers.  Bless ‘em.  I just spent Sunday morning at the beach, making what was recognisably a crocodile, a turtle and a castle out of sand with my 3 year old.

    • stephen says:

      04:34pm | 16/09/12

      Talking about kids on the beach with their shovels ... just saw Justine Schofield making rabbit stew on her cooking show on 10, and I gotta say I never seen a gal so happy in the kitchen and I wish there was more of them ... but she can never make me scrambled eggs, (where’s the cream, pecorino and torn basil, Jess ?)

      ps all girls should go to the kitchen to learn their craft, and leave the phones behind until they’re ready to pay the bills.

    • billyliar says:

      12:02pm | 16/09/12

      I never check emails on Sundays, in fact I never have my PC switched on.

    • Achmed says:

      01:26pm | 16/09/12

      todays Sunday.  suppose that explains the tag “billyliar”

    • pa_kelvin says:

      02:12pm | 16/09/12

      Agreed, I dont go anywhere near it…. smile

    • Warren says:

      12:08pm | 16/09/12

      Going without email for one day will NOT help.  It simply masks the real problem, and forces you to “catch up” on the missing day. It’s also impractical in a real-world, business environment. (Customers/clients/leads are not going to accept that you’re having an “email free day”. You might as well not be in business for that day.)

      The real problem is information overload, and time management.

      Things have have helped me:

      - only check mail on the hour, at most.  Quit the mail application.  Put the phone in the drawer/bag.

      - only web browse on the hour. When your task is done, close the app.

      - when browsing on the web, use a “Reader” function like that in Safari.  This hides all information apart from the text and basic images of the thing you are reading.

      - use a Desktop hiding utility. Something like DeskShade (on the Mac).  This hides everything on the Desktop, so you can’t be distracted.  Similarly, hide any Dock devices.

      - use fullscreen mode for apps, whereever possible. Eliminate distractions.

      - set a timer for 30 minutes or whatever. When the timer goes, you GET UP AND WALK AWAY FROM THE COMPUTER.  Yes, your immediate productivity will suffer, but your OVERALL productivity will increase. And your back will thank you for it.  Your wallet will thank you for it, when you no longer have to visit the physio.

      - GIVE UP TWITTER.  PERIOD.  YOU DO NOT NEED TWITTER.

      - only check FaceBook once a day, at HOME.  If someone wants to tell you something desperately, they’ll call you.

      - install Ad Blocker software for your web browser. It’s free. It works.

      - ask your friends not to pass on any more email jokes or “inspirations for the day” or similar spam.  Unless its cat pictures.

    • Inky says:

      05:37pm | 16/09/12

      Quick, we better ban email because some people can’t help themselves. It’s the Australian way.

    • Inky says:

      05:41pm | 16/09/12

      “Admit it. You’ve already checked your emails today, right? Even on a Sunday, we’re enslaved by two little words, 11 letters in total: Send/Receive.”

      I know, I just posted, but I have a followup. It consists of 8 letters: “I’m at work”. One wonders if the some people pushed for “email free” time are in the same group who are pushing for 24/7 availability of services they want or not. After all, “in this modern age I should be able to X when it’s convenient for me” but “oh no, these damn email, dragging me into work on my weekend”.

      Yeah, I’m bitter. But frankly, I think it’s fairly understandable. Yet another Sunday with me in this office, getting paid the same rates I get during 9-5, or more likely 3-11 during the week.

 

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