I keep my GPS turned off when I'm hunting. I work with that technology all week. Using it for recreation just turns my fun into work.
Agreed. I've always gravitated away from tech in my personal pursuits, probably in part because I work in technical profession all week:
1. My house was built in the early 1700's, and although we have indoor plumbing and a modern kitchen, it's kept relatively original.
2. I heat my home mostly with firewood. Satisfies the inner-caveman, and cheaper than a gym membership, until you figure in the costs of the orthopedist you may need later.
3. When getting back into boating after a many-years break, I chose to sail in a racing class that prohibits the use of GPS or communication devices on the race course.
4. My shop is filled with vintage woodworking machinery, and even those get favored less than hand-powered tools, when I can manage it.
5. I only ever bought manual transmission cars, until the point they became completely unavailable in each of the body types our life requires (e.g. sedan, wagon, suv, pickup).
Although if I'm being honest, most of this is done out of some stupid romantic idea that "life was simpler" in the old days, rather than "technology is work". I know life was almost certainly
not simpler for our forefathers, our mind just tends to confuse time with age, there. Life was simpler because you were young, not because it was the past... ask your parents.