Dr. ₿ 🟠 Profile picture
Feb 2 3 tweets 4 min read Read on X
The richest people in the world are quietly switching to flip phones. Not because they’re old. Not because they hate technology.
But because smartphones are destroying something far more valuable than money. Most people won’t realize it until it’s too late.

At a private dinner, a banker friend of mine noticed something strange.
Every billionaire at the table pulled out a button phone.
No apps. No notifications. No glowing screens.
It felt less like coincidence and more like a silent agreement.

He finally asked:
“Why don’t any of you use smartphones?”
The room went quiet.
Then someone said:
“Because every notification is someone else controlling my mind.”
To them, smartphones aren’t tools anymore.
They’re attention leaks.
Every buzz pulls focus.
Every scroll fragments thinking.
Every algorithm trains reaction instead of intention.
And attention is the rarest currency on Earth.

One billionaire said something chilling:
“Money is easy to make again. Focus is not.”
He explained that once attention breaks, decision quality collapses.
And bad decisions destroy fortunes faster than bad markets.
So they simplified.
Old phones. One function. Call. Message. Off.
No feeds competing for dopamine.
No endless mental noise.
No invisible manipulation.
Just silence, on command.

Ironically, the wealthier they became, the less technology they personally touched.
Their assistants manage screens.
They manage thinking.
Because power isn’t access to information—it’s control over your inner world.

One investor admitted:
“Quitting my smartphone lowered my anxiety more than therapy.”
Not because life became easier, but because his mind finally stopped being pulled in 100 directions.
He could hear his own thoughts again.

Meanwhile…
Most people wake up and touch their phone before touching their own awareness.
News. Fear. Comparison. Noise.
The mind gets hijacked before the day even begins.

The elite understand something most never learn:
If you don’t decide how your attention is used, someone else will decide for you.
And they will profit from it.
This is why flip phones became a status symbol.
Not because they’re cheaper, but because they signal independence.
“I choose when I connect.”
“I choose when I consume.”
“I choose when I disappear.”

Real luxury isn’t faster internet.
It isn’t the newest device.
It isn’t constant access.
Real luxury is mental silence.
Undisturbed thinking.
And time with yourself.
That’s the upgrade money can’t buy—unless you protect it.

That’s why 2 Rules of Michael Saylor’s (@saylor) 10 Rules for Life hit so hard:
Focus your energy
Guard your time
[see the full 10 + 2 pinned to my profile]

Assuming you’re not ready to ditch the smartphone yet, here’s how to reclaim focus and turn X into your superpower:
• No more doom scrolling or rage bait—mute, block, curate Lists for signal only.
• Use search intentionally: Dive into inflation, taxes, Bitcoin strategies instead of reactive feeds.
• Set strict notification rules and time blocks.

Reading the right things catapults you toward financial independence.

Grab “The Millionaire Next Door” and “The Bitcoin Standard” (free audiobook on YouTube).

Want to dig deeper on why digital minimalism is the real power move? Ever heard of Cal Newport’s 2019 book Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World?

This builds on his earlier ideas from Deep Work (focused, high-value effort) and tackles how constant digital noise—smartphones, apps, notifications, social media—fragments attention, spikes anxiety, and erodes meaningful living.

Core Definition of Digital Minimalism
Newport defines it as:
A philosophy of technology use in which you focus your online time on a small number of carefully selected and optimized activities that strongly support things you value, and then happily miss out on everything else.

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It’s not about rejecting all tech—it’s about intentionality. Less is more when tools compete for your attention. He contrasts this with the “maximalist” default: squeezing value from every app/feed/notification, which backfires because clutter is costly.

Key Principles
1. Clutter is costly — Every extra tool/habit consumes time, attention, and mental energy. Small “benefits” create big opportunity costs (e.g., scrolling kills deep thinking and real relationships).

2. Optimization is important — Don’t just pick tools; optimize how you use them. Set strict rules (specific times for email, high-value-only tech).

3. Intentionality is satisfying — Curating your digital life around what truly matters (values, goals, relationships) brings more fulfillment than endless consumption.

Practical Framework from the Book
• The 30-Day Digital Declutter — Take a 30-day break from optional tech (social media, news apps, non-essential messaging). Rediscover offline life: physical books, hobbies, face-to-face talks, solitude, exercise, nature. After, reintroduce only what passes the test: Does it strongly support my values? Can I optimize it to minimize distraction?

• High-quality leisure — Swap low-value screens for demanding, rewarding pursuits that build skills and make solitude enjoyable.

• Solitude and focus — Embrace unplugged time to think deeply. Notifications hijack your mind; minimalism reclaims it.

This philosophy resonates strongly with the flip-phone trend—wealthy/high-focus people ditching smartphones for basic devices to eliminate attention leaks. Newport himself discusses (and readers experiment with) this. It’s not anti-tech; it’s pro-control. Keep email/calls, ditch dopamine feeds. Adopters report less anxiety, better decisions, reclaimed mental space—echoing the billionaire anecdotes here.

How This Ties into the X Leverage Advice
The attention-as-currency angle Newport hammers home fits perfectly. Not ready for a full flip-phone switch?

His approach is your bridge:
• Curate X ruthlessly: Lists for Bitcoin/inflation/investment signal only (follow @saylor, macro thinkers; avoid rage-bait).

• Intentional sessions: Check X in set 20-30 min blocks for research, not endless scrolling.

• Apply the declutter: Do a mini digital break—audit X habits, mute notifications, block distractions, focus searches on taxes/Bitcoin strategies.

• Pair with books: Your recs (“The Millionaire Next Door,” “The Bitcoin Standard”) align perfectly—add Digital Minimalism (or Deep Work) to build the mindset for guarding focus/time, Saylor-style.

In short, Cal Newport’s digital minimalism is the intellectual backbone for why flip phones (or strict smartphone rules) are becoming a quiet power move.
It’s about protecting your inner world so you can build real wealth—financially and mentally.
Protect your attention like the billionaires do—that’s the upgrade that compounds forever. 🟠

Which Newport principle (or X curation tip) are you trying first? Reply below—let’s guard our focus and stack sats together.
And here another good reason on why to have a flip phone 😅

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