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How do people manage to keep track of their mobile phones

(135 Posts)
M0nica Sat 01-Nov-25 16:40:47

Forthe last 3 months, because of the vagaries of Vodaphone and Openreach we have had no telecomms at home so I have had to be dependent on my mobile phone.

The problem is I do nto always have it onme or close to me. When i go out I put it in my handbag, and when i return Iput the bag under the stairs, and if the phone rings I do not hear it. Alternatively it is on my desk - and if I am not near my desk, and I often aren't , it rigs and I do not hear it. Ditto whenit is in the car.

I tried putting it in a little bag slung round my neck, but the phone kept resetting itself and one of the things it reset was whether it would ring or not, so it kept turning off sound.

Carrying around in my hand all the time gives me cramp and anyway, I need both hands to do things.

There is nowhere in the house to put my phone where I can hear it all the time, and so many clothes lack pockets.

In our last home we had a VOIP (pretend landline) and that had a loud ring and we had three handsets, all of which rang in different parts of the house.

We have decided not to have fibre to the house, I do not quite understand what we have but it is some wireless gizmo that provides an excellent internet service, but no phone.

So I am utterly perplexed as to what to do to make sure I pick up all my calls.

V3ra Fri 07-Nov-25 14:22:37

...she kept it switched off to save the battery.

My Grandma did this with her hearing aids 🙄

Mollygo Fri 07-Nov-25 13:50:05

Leopard79

My phone is permanently on silent and I never answer calls 🙈🤣

Is it an age thing?
We bought Mum a basic one to help her keep in touch, when she couldn’t make it to the landline, but she kept it switched off to save the battery.

sazz1 Fri 07-Nov-25 13:31:41

Ever since I passed out in the garden (once after each covid jab) I carry my phone everywhere. Every room, in the garden, when I leave the house its always with me. Thankfully I have never passed out before or since and wasn't even hurt apart from a light scraige and bruises but I'm not taking any chances incase I do break a hip or something if it ever happens again.

M0nica Thu 06-Nov-25 20:54:38

Leopard79

My phone is permanently on silent and I never answer calls 🙈🤣

Why do you have a phone?

ViceVersa Thu 06-Nov-25 19:47:00

Leopard79

My phone is permanently on silent and I never answer calls 🙈🤣

Why?

Leopard79 Thu 06-Nov-25 18:21:26

My phone is permanently on silent and I never answer calls 🙈🤣

Mollygo Wed 05-Nov-25 09:59:00

Coolgran65

I keep my phone in my bra pushed to the side. Otherwise known as my inside pocket.

I do that and listen to audio books when I’m walking the dog, but it’s a bit embarrassing trying to press pause if someone stops to talk to you.

Whiff Wed 05-Nov-25 07:24:56

Coolgran unfortunately I haven't got enough boobage to keep my phone in my bra plus the case would scratch me.

But my phone is always with me in my pocket ,bag or hand even going to my bins as I fall . Plus it's in a case because I drop it all the time . When I shower it's outside where the door opens that way if I fall I can reach it .

Coolgran65 Tue 04-Nov-25 23:56:41

I keep my phone in my bra pushed to the side. Otherwise known as my inside pocket.

CariadAgain Tue 04-Nov-25 09:55:11

Missedout

CariadAgain

Those hugely intelligent male friends of yours need you because you offer support and help in areas that they don't understand either.
Don't do yourself down. Say what you want and ask for help to understand if you need to deal with technical stuff.

M0nica

Yes, I understand you have a 'difficult' house for telecomms. I'm not sure how you solve it. I found some engineers not very helpful but the last one I spoke to did understand his technology and gave first class support. I can only say keep trying.

Sorry everyone - I didn't mean to take the topic 'off-piste' with my replies. But there are several solutions to not carrying a mobile from room to room - from using Alexa/Siri, landline replacements and a smart watch working with your mobile.

Yep...I'm okay with this type of male friend I often attract. My father was like it - so I'm familiar with it LOL. Hence why I get a bit puzzled by men who aren't what I call "Renaissance Men" - but he never managed to explain maths well enough to me that I could "get it" to pass an O level in it - and he was a maths teacher latterly....and it all went straight over my head. It's good enough to work out my finances - and that's adequate usually.

But, if you want someone who sometimes (very very occasionally indeed) "knows" something she's not been told then it's probably me that has no idea why she's strongly avoiding somewhere she'd usually go = and then finding out what happened there (yep...I'm probably the one that would have changed my mind at the last minute about going on that train the knifeman was on) and taken it into my head to go and have a drink somewhere and then catch the next one. Or I told an organisation they were about to be gifted enough money that I could have my house deposit I needed from them (and was totally unable to save on my terribly low income) and ignored them telling me they werent going to be given any more money for that and told them to put my request through anyway whilst they looked at me disbelievingly and clearly wondering what sort of idiot they were talking to...and then they came back to me a few months later to tell me I was about to get it from them after all. I would not have got that house deposit I needed if I hadnt been prepared to be looked at like I was some sort of wierd idiot telling them this....

A very technical brain would be very handy - but I'd rather have the sort of brain I've got...

Grannynannywanny Tue 04-Nov-25 09:25:21

I have my phone with me always where ever I am. I place it on the floor when I have a shower in case I ever fell and need to call for help

travelsafar the image of your phone on the bathroom floor has given me flashbacks to an incident many years ago. I was in the attic bedroom stripping beds after a family visit. I was expecting a call and took the cordless handset upstairs with me and left it on the small landing floor outside the bedroom door.

I came out of the bedroom 15 mins later and stood on the phone. Thanks to the smooth and curved underside I took off and fell down a full flight of stairs and landed in a heap at the bottom. Amazingly I was uninjured.

Rather than having your phone on the floor it might be safer for you to have it on a small stool or something similar to raise it off the floor.

Missedout Tue 04-Nov-25 09:05:55

CariadAgain

Those hugely intelligent male friends of yours need you because you offer support and help in areas that they don't understand either.
Don't do yourself down. Say what you want and ask for help to understand if you need to deal with technical stuff.

M0nica

Yes, I understand you have a 'difficult' house for telecomms. I'm not sure how you solve it. I found some engineers not very helpful but the last one I spoke to did understand his technology and gave first class support. I can only say keep trying.

Sorry everyone - I didn't mean to take the topic 'off-piste' with my replies. But there are several solutions to not carrying a mobile from room to room - from using Alexa/Siri, landline replacements and a smart watch working with your mobile.

CariadAgain Tue 04-Nov-25 08:09:12

Missed Out

Thanks for that.

Think I've got the basic idea now.

Hopefully I'll manage now if it comes to it. With my type of mind being one that's incredibly UNtechnical things have to be ultra-simple for me to get the gist of them when it comes to technical stuff.

I've got a newish neighbour that's obviously got one of those "Renaissance Man" mindsets and it focuses around technical matters (I can only live in envy at the fact that even his just started primary school child can watch him do something once on a computer and he's learnt how to do it from those genes he's inherited!), and a very intelligent technically-minded male friend here then I think I should manage now I've got the basic gist and my (totally non-technical mind) should have enough of the language to explain to either of them what I'm talking about.

I tend to accummulate hugely intelligent male friends that regard all this sort of stuff as "kindergarten level" - and it goes way over my head.

M0nica Tue 04-Nov-25 08:04:58

Missedout We had a landline replaced by a VOIP phone a year ago in our previous house.

We found that the range of a VOIP phone was far less than the landline. That was despite having MESH route extenders in several rooms, calls would cut off part way through and on several occasions the line disconnected and we were unable to receive calls until we realised the problem and reset the phone.

I found that the VOIP phone provided a service well below that we were accustomed to with our landline. Our experience was also Openreach/BT.

Fidelity2 I am quite happy using my phone, and we have, or had until recently a landline/VOIP phone with answerphone etc. My problem is that we are having difficulty getting any kind of telecommunication connections in our new house because of damage to the conduti the cable/fibre has to be pulled through. We have been waiting 3 months for OpenReach to come and fix it. In the meanwhile I am completely dependent on my mobile phone - except I can never remember where it is and because it is a big house with two huge chimney stacks in the centre. It is not easy to hear it ringing if it is the other side of a 10 foot by 6 foot mass of brickwork or in the car.

travelsafar Tue 04-Nov-25 07:35:09

I have my phone with me always where ever I am. I place it on the floor when I have a shower in case I ever fell and need to call for help.
It gives me a feeling of safety to know I could contact someone in an emergency. This all started after my husband died and I was alone in the house. Now it's second nature to take it to whatever room I am in and I never leave the house without it either.

Missedout Mon 03-Nov-25 23:52:35

CariadAgain

So - am I interpreting you aright and thinking that, if I can't prevent them swopping my phoneline, what I would get:-

-a new phone (very much the same as my old one) at both locations (ie one in my study and one in my sitting room) and I could both make and receive calls in the normal way on my normal number.-

Yes, but the VOIP phones can go where you want them - they are wireless and just need power points. However, you will need to spend time re-adding your contact details to the new phones.

-So it would just be down to disadvantages of:
a. They'd probably try and charge me to buy two new phones I don't need as far as I'm concerned.

BT replaced my old handset phones as part of the switchover to full fibre, I didn't pay for them.

b. THE biggie - that if electric goes out then my phones would stop working (unlike my current ones - which do keep working even if the electric isnt on).

I'm afraid that phone companies can't maintain the old copper networks. They will stop working anyway. If you are vulnerable, you may be provided with battery backup. I can see the mobile phone mast from my window. My mobile works in power cuts.

c. Would they charge me for having an "extension" phone in their new style - so I'd get the bill for putting in an extension twice (ie the one I paid years back for another phone having to be paid again - because of their change of my phone)? I know BT were awkward when I bought this house in the first place and told them to install an extension socket and they told me it would mean wires running round visibly in my house from room to room unnecessarily. So I had to pay an electrician extra to come in and run the phonewires where they were due to go (ie up in the loft of my bungalow - so I saw as little as possible of them). I find it very difficult to convince workmen in my current area that it is absolutely the norm in my home area for us NOT to see pipes/wires/etc all over the place inside our homes and they are hidden as far as possible - so it has to be our normal way for me in this area too (ie the everything hidden sort of way we're used to).

No charge for putting in extensions - as I said above, VOIP handsets are wireless but you may need a router extender disc to get a signal to both handsets (which I needed). BT provided this for me as part of the install.

It wasn't a particularly easy install and I had a few 'conversations' with BT engineers but it all seems to work OK.

Please note that I am speaking about my experience with Openreach/BT of moving to full fibre broadband from the old copper networks. I can't comment about other providers.

V3ra Mon 03-Nov-25 23:52:30

I do find the flat thin shape of a mobile phone very uncomfortaable to hold and holding it for any time gives me cramp in my hand.

M0nica it was my wrist that was hurting.
I've bought some of these stands: I can sit my phone on one on the table and just type with one hand.

amzn.eu/d/3H8npmh

Fidelity2 Mon 03-Nov-25 23:28:35

I meant to say ....just got emergencies when you are out.

Fidelity2 Mon 03-Nov-25 23:24:15

Why not have an answering machine at home with your landline and a mobile phone just got a possible emergencies when you are out?

Spidergran3 Mon 03-Nov-25 23:01:50

I use a lanyard for my phone, brilliant for hands free. There’s lots to choose from on Amazon.

M0nica Mon 03-Nov-25 22:02:54

Cariad the problem isn't the supplier, it is Openreach, who keep delaying repairing the trunking needed to deliver the fibre to the house and this is the problem no matter which company we go with none of them can do anything until Openreach digs a hole in the ground and repairs the trunking.

So we, so to speak, decided to cut the Gordian knot and simply use a system that does not require a fibre connection to the house

CariadAgain Mon 03-Nov-25 20:43:20

Typing amendment again - half the town that I'm told has asbestos all over the place in the gubbins...not all the town.

CariadAgain Mon 03-Nov-25 20:42:05

Could you swop to a different supplier Monica - if one lot isnt being co-operative...then maybe another lot might be more so. I'm with Utility Warehouse personally and was surprised (and heartened) to see the other day that they arent "pushing it" like other suppliers are for those darn fibre lines. I've not had any problems to date with them - ie even of the "normal" variety - since swopping to them. So I'm keeping my fingers crossed.

I estimate I've got the best chance of hanging onto what I've got for as long as possible with them - and I've been informed that there's asbestos there in the "gubbins" (technical term) in this old-fashioned little town I'm in - ie they aren't going to be keen on touching anything they don't have to. With some of what I've seen/been gobsmacked by I'm perfectly prepared to believe the "loadsa asbestos" tale too.

M0nica Mon 03-Nov-25 19:29:26

emilie

Use a landline.

If you have one!

In our last house our landline was removed and replaced by a VOIP fibre line. It was not as good as a landline.

In this house the choice is only VOIP, because all that was on offer was a fibre connection, and anyway, after three months waiting for Openreach to come and repair the conduit to the house so that Vodaphone could run a full fibre line, we have given up, and bought a 5G hub.

We are now going to get another type of phone, that will probable have a mobile phone type number, but operate like a VOIP phone and have the look and feel of an ordinary phone.

clbm thank you for the info on the popsockets. They looke really interesting, but quite expensive. I might put one on my Christmas list and see if anyone will treat me.

CariadAgain Mon 03-Nov-25 19:26:30

Missedout

I have two VOIP handsets (similar to my old landline phones except they no longer use copper cable - they run over fibre), one downstairs, one upstairs. They are set up just as my old handsets 'with buttons'. We are part organisers of a local club and get lots of calls on the number we have had for decades.

I also have a mobile which came with a free smart watch. I didn't think much of the watch until I started to wear it. I now wouldn't be without the watch. I only need to have my mobile nearby. I don't need to walk about with my mobile in hand, no opportunity to steal my phone when out. I've set my watch to vibrate on my wrist rather than ring. Yes, I've taken a call on my watch when in the toilet! It was an appointment on offer in hospital following a last minute cancellation. I was really pleased not to have missed it. No-one needed to know where I was when I answered the call!

So - am I interpreting you aright and thinking that, if I can't prevent them swopping my phoneline, what I would get:

- a new phone (very much the same as my old one) at both locations (ie one in my study and one in my sitting room) and I could both make and receive calls in the normal way on my normal number.

- So it would just be down to disadvantages of:
a. They'd probably try and charge me to buy two new phones I don't need as far as I'm concerned.

b. THE biggie - that if electric goes out then my phones would stop working (unlike my current ones - which do keep working even if the electric isnt on).

c. Would they charge me for having an "extension" phone in their new style - so I'd get the bill for putting in an extension twice (ie the one I paid years back for another phone having to be paid again - because of their change of my phone)? I know BT were awkward when I bought this house in the first place and told them to install an extension socket and they told me it would mean wires running round visibly in my house from room to room unnecessarily. So I had to pay an electrician extra to come in and run the phonewires where they were due to go (ie up in the loft of my bungalow - so I saw as little as possible of them). I find it very difficult to convince workmen in my current area that it is absolutely the norm in my home area for us NOT to see pipes/wires/etc all over the place inside our homes and they are hidden as far as possible - so it has to be our normal way for me in this area too (ie the everything hidden sort of way we're used to).