I needed to find a way to spread joy, light and some kindness. This is what I created. This is an act of light in the darkness for me. https://t.co/K2m69pc7Zb
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We may be approaching software fatigue at a civilizational level.
Not just burnout from work apps. Not just Zoom exhaustion.
Deep down we all feel it, a quiet frustration is growing.
An inner rejection of endless sign-ups, pop-ups, logins, dashboards, portals, settings, updates.
The creeping feeling that every “solution” is just another tab to manage.
We were told: “This app will simplify your life“ “This software will make things easier“
But instead, life feels more fragmented. Our minds more scattered. Our time more occupied and less our own.
What if people don’t want another tool in Slack?
What if they don’t want “invisible software” silently integrating into every corner of their day?
What if all they want… is less?
Less software. Less noise. Less complexity. Less digital dependency.
We’ve built a digital world that only functions if people stay constantly connected.
But many are quietly (or soon consciously) unplugging.
And that’s where conscious disconnection comes in.
Not as rejection of tech… But a REDEFINITION of the TERMS.
It’s about being more intentional. Setting boundaries.
Silence over signal.
A slow, cultural immune response to a system that’s gone too far.
Some will argue: “That’s the whole point of AI… to run the system so we don’t have to.”
But that still assumes the system is worth running.
That life inside the machine is the end goal.
Maybe the win is building tech that knows when to leave us alone.
Tech that doesn’t fight for attention… but respects it.
Not more automation… but deeper alignment.
Not scaling what is… but rethinking what should be.
Conscious disconnection isn’t a trend (yet). Maybe more a quiet rebellion. Likely a very needed shift.
The future isn’t only about what we build, but what we choose to walk away from.
This dog's name was Gunner. My uncle brought him back from WW2. He was raised and slept under my uncle's anti- aircraft gun. The gun crew shared their
rations to feed him. By the time he was 18 months old, my uncle said he would stand up and look at the sky. If he laid back down they knew all was ok. If he growled
and put his hackles up they got at the ready. He knew the sound of the German aircraft and my uncle said he
never got it wrong. He said Gunner was better than any early warning system. I'm probably the only one left in the family that knows that story now, so I thought I'd tell it before it's lost forever, like many stories must be from that time. Thanks for reading it.
This is powerful 🔥
“It has been one month to the day since Charlie Kirk was assassinated. I want to explain how that’s affected my life..”
“You can find [old] videos of me saying with my full chest, ‘f*ck God’, because I was so entrenched in my atheism..”
“Since Charlie Kirk’s death I have personally organized two candlelight vigils, I’ve attended 3 candlelight vigils, and I’ve been to church every single Sunday since..”
“I’m gonna make sure that my son grows up admiring men like Charlie Kirk. And I’m gonna make sure he grows up believing in Christ.”
OMG i did it!!
After years of waiting!
I got the shot iv always wanted.
This magical tree Tunnel in fall,I just love the Autumn colours 🍂
My favourite time of the year is here.
I really hope you like it!
Let me know ❤️