mental health

  • Why Silence Feels Uncomfortable Now

    We used to fear being alone with predators. Now we fear being alone with our own thoughts. Modern life has become so loud, so fast, and so relentlessly stimulating that silence itself has started to feel unnatural. A quiet room feels awkward. Waiting in line without checking a phone feels unbearable. Even moments meant for rest are quickly filled with scrolling, streaming, podcasts, notifications, or background noise. The problem is…

  • Doomscrolling as Self-Harm

    We used to fear silence because it made us feel alone. Now we fear silence because it forces us to hear ourselves think. So instead, we scroll. Through tragedies. Through outrage. Through war footage, discourse, scandals, economic collapse, climate anxiety, celebrity meltdowns, and strangers broadcasting emotional breakdowns in real time. And somehow, even while it hurts us, we keep going. Doomscrolling is not just a bad habit anymore. For many…

  • Learning to Sit With Your Own Mind Again

    Many people are not overwhelmed because they think too much. They are overwhelmed because they never stop long enough to process what they are already carrying.

  • Nobody Rests Anymore

    We created a culture that mistakes exhaustion for ambition. Rest became laziness. Silence became awkward. Stillness became something to fix with noise. Now entire generations are emotionally collapsing under the weight of constant stimulation, invisible pressure, and lives that never truly pause.

  • Notes Written While Overstimulated

    We live inside an era of permanent interruption. Notifications, headlines, algorithms, advertisements, opinions, tragedies, and performances now compete for the same fragile portion of human attention. “Notes Written While Overstimulated” explores what happens to emotional life when the nervous system is exposed to endless input without rest — and why so many people now mistake numbness for functioning.

  • Smartphone Brains & Dopamine Dependency

    Our brains evolved to survive predators, scarcity, and physical danger — not infinite scrolling, nonstop notifications, and algorithmic stimulation. Yet modern life now places millions of people inside a permanent cycle of emotional consumption where attention is constantly under attack. Smartphones did not simply change communication. They rewired behavior. Dopamine-driven platforms transformed human focus into a commodity, training people to crave stimulation every waking moment. The result is a generation…

  • The Emotional History of the Smartphone Era

    The smartphone did not simply change communication. It altered the emotional architecture of everyday life. It changed the pace of loneliness, the texture of boredom, the performance of identity, the rhythm of grief, the meaning of memory, and the psychological relationship people had with one another. The emotional history of the smartphone era is not merely technological — it is the story of human feeling reorganized under conditions of permanent…

  • Our Brains Were Never Built For This

    Human beings evolved to survive storms, predators, hunger, and uncertainty — not endless notifications, breaking news, infinite scrolling, and constant emotional stimulation. Modern life has become an uninterrupted stream of information demanding our attention every second of the day. The result is a society emotionally exhausted, mentally fragmented, and psychologically overwhelmed. Our brains were never built for this level of nonstop input, yet we continue forcing ourselves to adapt to…