No, but minimizing my interactions with technology is tempting. I used to care a lot about technology, but now? I think most of it is used to bullshit. Which is part of why I haven't tried to get a career in it. I think that a key to having a healthy relationship with any habit is to ask yourself "What am I getting out of this? Am I happier for it? Is it harming me?" So: I like using a computer to record what little personal notes I have. I find that the ability to quickly navigate through, search, modify, and share them is powerful. I don't like using my cellphone. I think that texting and phone calls get relied on too much. They aren't as 'deep' to me as face to face conversations. What's probably the minimum I can comfortably stand? I'd be fine with a land line and a raspberry pi. When I moved from an urban area with unlimited broadband to a rural area with a 5 GB/month data cap and spotty connectivity, my quality of life didn't deteriorate. And it didn't jump up when I moved back to the land of cable. As a society, we need to get better at learning to use technology responsibly. Which isn't the same as not using it at all. ->edit<- I'm sorry, I drilled my attention down to the last line of your post and the rest of it went sailing by. Traveling? Moving off the grid? Willpower? What's prompting the change (if you don't mind my asking)? Does the unplugged lifestyle tempt you?
The question occurs to me because it may be my situation in a year.