“I Thought Staying up Late Was ‘Me Time’ – Until I Learned the Truth”
Writer Clare Stephens unpacks the late-night doom-scrolling spiral keeping her awake.
It’s 2am, and I have the entire world in my hands.
Words, and images, and stories, and videos, and all of human history. The answer to almost any question I can possibly conjure. Live footage of a tragedy unfolding on the other side of the world, and a guy laughing at a seal who’s enthusiastically joined a pod of dolphins, and a debate where a charismatic politician ‘owns’ his opponent. It’s all at my fingertips, just waiting to be discovered.
It’s a never-ending promise, my phone screen. A promise that I’ll find what I’m looking for inside it. What, exactly, that is, I don’t know.
Perhaps my revenge at bedtime shouldn’t be against myself – against the lack of freedom I have in a day. But revenge against the tech companies who have designed platforms and devices that prey on our weaknesses. That give us the illusion of the entire world to hold in our hands, making it near impossible to put them down.
They built a source of temptation with billions of dollars, the greatest modern minds, and all the resources to hack human psychology. So sleeping in a phone-free room, my endless stream of notifications pinging away into nothingness, with that temptation out of my reach, feels like a necessary form of revenge. A powerful one.
Even if it’s remarkably difficult.
Create a Calming Bedroom
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