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Can true solitude be found in a wired world?

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The key, he and others say, is to develop a reputation for being responsive, but not hyper-responsive. He sets those limits himself — has given up Facebook and generally answers emails or texts from colleagues or students within half a day, if it’s nothing too urgent. If you make yourself available all the time, people come to expect it even more, he says.

“And the more responsive you are, the more trivial things you get queried about.”

Davidson, from Duke, says it also helps when there is a “built-in alibi” — the message from a work or social circle where unplugging is accepted, and even welcomed.

But Jones in Chicago says you also have to let yourself off the hook and resist the urge to constantly check in to see what friends are doing.

Social networking “makes it seem like everybody’s doing something awesome,” she says. “But you can’t always worry about what other people are doing.

“You have to give yourself permission to miss out.”

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Online:

Sabbath Manifesto: http://www.sabbathmanifesto.org/about

The Undo List: http://theundolist.com/

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Martha Irvine is an AP national writer. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org or via http://twitter.com/irvineap

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