Brighton and Hove Psychotherapy

01273 921 355
Online therapy In the press
  • Home
  • Therapy services
    • Fees
    • How psychotherapy works
    • Who is it for?
    • Individual psychotherapy
    • Child therapy
    • Couples counselling and therapy in Brighton
    • Marriage counselling
    • Family therapy and counselling
    • Group psychotherapy
    • Corporate services
    • Leadership coaching and consultancy
    • Clinical supervision for individuals and organisations
    • FAQs
  • Types of therapy
    • Acceptance commitment therapy (ACT)
    • Analytic psychotherapy
    • Body-orientated psychotherapy
    • Private clinical psychology
    • Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)
    • Compassion focused therapy (CFT)
    • Cult Recovery
    • Dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT)
    • Therapy for divorce or separation
    • Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR)
    • Existential therapy
    • Group analytic psychotherapy
    • Integrative therapy
    • Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)
    • Non-violent resistance (NVR)
    • Family and systemic psychotherapy
    • Schema therapy
    • Transactional analysis (TA)
    • Trauma psychotherapy
  • Types of issues
    • Abuse
    • Addiction counselling Brighton
      • Gambling addiction therapy
      • Porn addiction help
    • Affairs
    • Anger management counselling in Brighton
    • Anxiety
    • Bereavement counselling
    • Cross-cultural issues
    • Depression
    • Family issues
    • LGBT+ issues and therapy
    • Low self-esteem
    • Relationship issues
    • Sexual issues
    • Stress
  • Online therapy
    • Online anger management therapy
    • Online anxiety therapy
    • Online therapy for bereavement
    • Online therapy for depression
    • Online relationship counselling
  • Find my therapist
    • Our practitioners
  • Blog
    • Ageing
    • Attachment
    • Child development
    • Families
    • Gender
    • Groups
    • Loss
    • Mental health
    • Neuroscience
    • Parenting
    • Psychotherapy
    • Relationships
    • Sexuality
    • Sleep
    • Society
    • Spirituality
    • Work
  • About us
    • Sustainability
    • Work with us
    • Press
  • Contact us
    • Contact us – Brighton and Hove practice
    • Contact us – Lewes practice
    • Contact us – online therapy
    • Contact us – press
    • Privacy policy

June 16, 2025 by BHP Leave a Comment

Wearable tech: when is there too much data?

Data as part of our lives

There must be very few people who don’t own or use a device that is in some way taking note of their day-to-day lives. Steps taken, hours slept, calories burned. The list of data that our wearable devices can generate for us is sizeable. It might not be something that we’ve actively asked for or are looking at, but it’s there.

What is our relationship with the data that is available to us? There are many people who are either unaware that such data is even there, or who just chose not to take much notice of it. For others it can be a source of motivation, the tool that they need to keep them focused and help them to achieve and maintain goals. A feeling that the data gives them the knowledge and support to optimise their lives and rewards them for doing so.

The volume of data available is potentially huge and could easily become overwhelming. What might be motivating and supportive to some, could also become onerous and feel like a pressure to perform for others. The data that is both compelling and challenging.

What if data isn’t helpful?

The potential to constantly have data on our daily lives and performance can speak to that part of us that likes to be informed. The relationship with data could also be revealing of other parts of us that may be more about being perfect. What effect does it have on us when we feel that we are being monitored and that we are responding to that? Does the constant stream of data go from being motivating to being a source of anxiety about performance?

The data from wearable devices invariably skews towards individual performance and an emphasis on health-related data. It can feel like we are being monitored and judged by a device that we chose to wear. The pressure to ‘optimise’ every aspect of life can lead to patterns of behaviour, where people could become driven by and focussed on hitting targets. It could be that ultimately people may begin to measure their self-worth against arbitrary data, leading to feelings of inadequacy if they fail to meet their targets.

The shared nature of data brings in the dimension that one might also be performing against others. What does it feel like to have day-to-day activities compared to that of others?

We can ultimately distil the relationship with data down to a sense of performance and the feelings that come with it. Raising the thought that we are either feeling supported and encouraged or becoming unsettled and anxious.

Does the data make us feel good about ourselves or are we questioning if we are good enough? How can we limit what we see and have a sense of ourselves that doesn’t need to be supported by data?

Challenging the data relationship

The more unsettling aspect of wearable tech is that it can resonate with a part of us that strives for perfection, but also that we might need something external to inform us of how we feel about ourselves. One’s self-worth has become tied up with data and comparison which are externally derived.

How can we challenge this relationship? It would be simplistic to say that if we remove or disable the device then we are free of the data. Coming off data might be a challenge and can give rise to feelings of loss. What is it like to think of ourselves without data? Are we able to rely on our own instincts and feelings to have a sense of how we are preforming?

When our expectations of how we perform are based on what our devices show us, there is a need to create more realistic expectations. Psychotherapy offers a valuable space for individuals to explore the feelings that wearable tech and performance may have on their sense of who they are. Restoring a sense of agency in the individual’s choices and finding how to have expectations of performance that are not heavily based on data. This allows the development of a more balanced relationship with technology.

Wearable tech has undeniably transformed the way we approach our health and performance. However, when the data becomes a focus of our well-being, it can shift the relationship with both technology and the individual’s sense of self.

 

To enquire about psychotherapy sessions with David , please contact him here, or to view our full clinical team, please click here.

David Work is a BACP registered psychotherapist working with adults, offering long term individual psychotherapy. He works with individuals in Hove .

 

Further reading by David Work –

In support of vulnerability

Trauma and the use of pornography

Reflections on bereavement

Compulsive use of pornography

Mental health in retirement

Filed Under: David Work, Mental health, Society Tagged With: data and self-worth, data overload, digital self-image, digital wellbeing, fitness tracking, health optimisation, mental health and technology, perfectionism, performance anxiety, psychotherapy and data, self-monitoring, tracking devices, wearable data, wearable tech

Find your practitioner

loader
Meta Data and Taxonomies Filter

Locations -

  • Brighton
  • Lewes
  • Online
loader
loader
loader
loader
loader

Search for your practitioner by location

Brighton
Lewes

Therapy services +

Therapy services: 

Therapy types

Therapy types: 

Our practitioners

  • Sam Jahara
  • Mark Vahrmeyer
  • Gerry Gilmartin
  • Dr Simon Cassar
  • Claire Barnes
  • David Work
  • Shiraz El Showk
  • Thad Hickman
  • Susanna Petitpierre
  • David Keighley
  • Kirsty Toal
  • Joseph Bailey
  • Lucie Ramet
  • Georgie Leake

Search our blog

Work with us

Find out more….

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Charities we support

One Earth Logo

Hove clinic
49 Church Road, Hove, East Sussex, BN3 2BE

Lewes clinic
Star Brewery, Studio 22, 1 Castle Ditch Lane, Lewes, BN7 1YJ

Copyright © 2025
Press enquiries
Privacy policy
Resources
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.AcceptReject Privacy Policy
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT