• @[email protected]
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    274 days ago

    I will grant that social media has given us access to all of the misery we want all of the time, and that those algorithms also prioritize content that makes us angry.

    However, it would be toxic positivity to say that things are actually fine or even pretty good.

    Things are objectively getting worse. Income inequality is somewhere between near gilded age levels and worse. The planet is dying in front of our eyes. Fascists are taking power in many governments.

    Things are actually pretty bleak. That doesn’t mean there’s no hope. But burying your head in the sand and pretending things are fine … well, I can understand that impulse. And I can understand that for some, it’s a coping mechanism. And for sure, do what you gotta to get by and all. But it’s not helpful in the broader sense.

    • @MonkRome
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      4 days ago

      I don’t disagree with a single word you said. But having perspective and leaving time to be human is not burying your head in the sand.

      The last things I tried to say was that taking action is one thing you can do to mitigate your sense of helplessness. People who help others or try to make the world a better place often end up in a better mental space. It has the added benefit of working against all of the bad shit that is happening. Pick something, anything you care about, and try to make a difference. Even if you only make a tiny difference, if a thousand other people go out there and make the same tiny difference, suddenly you’ve moved the needle. In my experience, despair is nearly always coupled with paralyzed inaction.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 days ago

        I would agree, and my advice is getting active locally. Getting involved in your community is great for many reasons.