You can also spread it to other things. A bunch of unwatched movies, undone things to do, a slew of things waiting to be experienced.
Indeed, I find that aside from there just being too much media to consumer, there’s also a factor of available energy. What I notice often happens is that browsing stuff like social media requires less mental effort than reading or even playing a game. So, you kind of just do it mindlessly when you’re bored, but then you end up regretting not having spent the time doing something you would’ve found more meaningful instead. It’s an intellectual equivalent of eating fast food instead of having a proper meal.
Yeah that’s exactly the case. The effect of social media can’t be denied. They call it “cheap dopamine” for the brain, since it’s hijacking our attention and behavior, changing our action to concentrate less and getting addicted to it with a flood of information.
Me, looking at my Steam Library…
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Yeah, my Steam Deck has made a dent, but I have a big backlog from old school $1 Humble Bundles, because there was no reason not to as a broke gamer with a potato PC…
“When I upgrade I can play all these!”
…such wishful thinking.
Oh this is so true
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I do find I mostly read ebooks nowadays as well.
Then there are the rotting watermelons over in corner, expensive books that a professor in college required and then almost never used. And now they sit, unlovable and difficult to resell because a new edition has come out with the problems at the back of the chapter rearranged.
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Genuinely have a stack of books (mostly theory with some fiction) that sits on the floor next to my desk. I swear I will read them all one day.