Words matter. These are the best Unplug Quotes from famous people such as Carrie Underwood, Will Wright, Pico Iyer, Carl Honore, Bria Vinaite, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
When I’m with my parents, that’s the place I can unplug. That’s the place I can shut down and not worry about work or what’s going on. I go home and hang out with them. I sleep more there than any place else ever.
I find it refreshing to unplug from it for a while. You kind of forget how deeply you get embedded in it.
The more ways we have to connect, the more many of us seem desperate to unplug.
In this media-drenched, multitasking, always-on age, many of us have forgotten how to unplug and immerse ourselves completely in the moment. We have forgotten how to slow down. Not surprisingly, this fast-forward culture is taking a toll on everything from our diet and health to our work and the environment.
For me, if I didn’t have reading I’d go absolutely crazy. It really helps me to unplug from the whole world, and keep my sanity, and be able to fill my time with something other than technology.
Yoga, working out, go to class, group settings where you can’t be on your phone, that’s a great way to unplug!
I have a new joke today. Martha Stewart’s on suicide watch. They had to unplug all of her ovens.
I have always heard that you need to give yourself a long time to unplug when you do a sabbatical. I unplugged so fast I was a little concerned that I was losing brain capacity.
I am not an ‘unplug’ person. I like being plugged in.
As a mom, spending quality time on the water with my family is a simple and relaxing way to unplug.
Especially when you have a lot going on, you must find a way to unplug and focus on yourself.
I am going to spend more time face-to-face with my friends and family. I am going to unplug more.
Once upon a time you could actually unplug and it wasn’t, like, a weird thing. Now your friends will say, ‘I’m fasting from social media.’
I think that music is a lifestyle that you sort of intravenously plug into and unplug from when you do and don’t need it. Some people live it 10 hours a day, some on weekends. It’s no more important or non-important than that.
If the point of an activity is to be relaxing, changing that point to money isn’t a great idea. Then you have to show up for it differently, and that can take the fun out of it, absolutely. I’m a big fan of turning your hobbies into businesses, but not if it’s the hobby you do to relax and unplug.
I cannot get myself interested in video games. I’ve been given video game players and they just sit there connected to my TVs gathering dust until eventually I unplug them so I can put in another special-region DVD player.
Work is important, but you also need to disconnect, to unplug at times, in order to be even more concentrated when you do work.
In barely one generation, we’ve moved from exulting in the time-saving devices that have so expanded our lives to trying to get away from them – often in order to make more time. The more ways we have to connect, the more many of us seem desperate to unplug.
We’re plugged in 24 hours a day now. We’re all part of one big machine, whether we are conscious of that or not. And if we can’t unplug from that machine, eventually we’re going to become mindless.
It’s so important for me to unplug for a little bit, to have dinner with my husband. He’s a great cook. I’m very fortunate.
There’ll come a writing phase where you have to defend the time, unplug the phone and put in the hours to get it done.
There is a part of me that still wants to go out and grab a backpack and unplug – not take a cellphone or even a camera and just get out there and experience the world and travel. I have yet to do that, but someday I hope.