I let my phone die one Friday evening and, on a whim, decided not to charge it again until Monday. No grand digital-detox announcement, no warning anyone I was going off-grid. I simply let it run flat and left it face down on a shelf for two days, to see what would happen.
The obvious thing to report would be who noticed and who didn’t, and there’s a version of this where I tell you it was sobering how few people clocked my absence. That wasn’t the part that stayed with me, though. What stayed with me, scrolling back through everything on Monday morning, was the realisation of what most of my closest relationships had actually been running on. Not presence. Something a great deal more like maintenance.
Maintenance feels like connection, only it isn’t quite
There’s a kind of contact that keeps a relationship technically alive without ever really feeding it. The forwarded meme. The “haha”. The like on the photo. The quick reply to a quick question. The birthday message your calendar reminded you to send. It’s frequent, it’s friendly, it costs almost nothing, and it does a genuinely useful job, which is to stop a relationship flatlining. But it is not the same act as being present with someone, and we have started to confuse the two rather badly.
Presence is the expensive version. It’s undivided attention, a real conversation, the experience of actually being with another person while nothing else is competing for you. It’s rare, it eats time, and the crucial part is that it cannot be done with a thumb. Maintenance can be done with a thumb, in the gaps, between other tasks, half an eye on the television. That distinction, thumb versus whole self, turns out to be most of the distinction that matters.
What the weekend actually exposed
When I looked back over the two days I’d been dark, the striking part was how completely nothing had needed my presence at all. A meme thread with a close friend. A scatter of likes. A “you about this weekend?” that I answered late to no consequence whatsoever. A couple of group-chat exchanges that had rolled along perfectly happily without me in them. All of it maintenance, and maintenance, by its very nature, does not miss you while you’re gone, because there was never anything there to interrupt in the first place.
Those relationships, running purely on upkeep, just went silent for forty-eight hours and picked back up two days later as though no time had passed, which, in the only sense that counts, it hadn’t. That was the unsettling bit. Not that people failed to notice. That in a lot of cases there was nothing there to notice the absence of.
The friend I’d been maintaining for a year
The example that landed hardest was my friend Mark. Mark and I are in contact most days. Memes, mainly. A rolling back-and-forth of links and jokes and the occasional “how’s things” that neither of us ever genuinely answers. By the measure of sheer frequency, we’re close, I interact with him more than with almost anyone alive. But sitting there on Monday I realised, with a small jolt, that I had not had an actual conversation with Mark, the kind where you talk about something real and come away knowing more about each other than you did before, in well over a year.
We hadn’t drifted apart. That was the strange part. We were in constant contact. We’d simply swapped presence for maintenance so gradually and so thoroughly that the sheer volume of the upkeep had concealed the total absence of the real thing. On paper I was closer to Mark than to nearly anyone, and I honestly could not have told you how he was underneath the memes, because I hadn’t asked, or been there to hear the answer, in longer than I wanted to admit.
I wasn’t the victim here. I was doing it too.
It would be easy to spin this into a story about other people holding me at arm’s length, fobbing me off with maintenance when I deserved presence. The truth ran in the opposite direction. I was the maintainer. I was the one thumbing out likes and memes to my closest people in the dead gaps of my day and calling it keeping in touch. I had let the easy, frictionless version stand in for the hard, time-consuming one, across relationship after relationship, and the phone had made it so simple to do that I’d never once noticed I was doing it.
My phone is extraordinarily good at this. It lets you maintain fifty relationships with a thumb and feel, plausibly, like a deeply connected person. What it cannot do, what nothing can do on your behalf, is be present for you. Presence has to be spent, in person or at the very least in full attention, and the phone’s cleverest trick is persuading you that the maintenance is the presence, that being in constant light contact with everyone amounts to the same as being genuinely close to someone.
Maintenance isn’t the enemy. Misplacing it is.
I’m not about to tell anyone to fling their phone in a lake. Maintenance has a real and honourable place. It’s precisely the right tool for the wide outer ring of a life, the loose ties, the people you like and want to keep warm but were never going to be deeply present with regardless. Keeping fifty acquaintances gently ticking over with the odd meme is a perfectly good use of a thumb, and a small social good in its own right.
The mistake is letting maintenance creep inward, into the handful of relationships that genuinely deserve presence, until your closest people are receiving the identical thumb-typed upkeep as everyone else and you’ve stopped showing up for them in any way that costs you something. That’s the slide the phone makes frictionless, and it’s the one worth guarding against. Use maintenance for the many. Keep presence for the few, and then actually spend it on them.
I charged the phone on Monday and went straight back to all of it, the memes, the likes, the friendly low-grade hum of staying technically in touch. I won’t pretend a weekend reformed me. I did do one thing differently, though. I rang Mark, properly rang him, and we talked for an hour about nothing in particular and everything underneath it, and I came away knowing how he actually was for the first time in a year. It cost me an hour and my full attention, which is to say it cost me the exact two things maintenance is designed to spare you spending. That hour was worth more than twelve months of memes, and the only reason I’d never got round to spending it was that the memes had done such a convincing impression of closeness that I’d forgotten there was anything else left to give.