- 10 Dec, 2025 *
What is difficult is getting out of the rut we find our self stuck in. Could this lead into another analogy regarding high-torque vehicles aiming to achieve record finishes? Why yes—it could—but I won’t let it, because I’m actually referring to depression.
Along with all that mindless consumption of content, albeit complicated each production was, the undertow of rip current takes us into a sort of blackhole and often "the algorithm" gets blamed.
To find the truth in our restlessness, one must look at the self rather than the machine doing only that which the machine was designed to do (produce result…
- 10 Dec, 2025 *
What is difficult is getting out of the rut we find our self stuck in. Could this lead into another analogy regarding high-torque vehicles aiming to achieve record finishes? Why yes—it could—but I won’t let it, because I’m actually referring to depression.
Along with all that mindless consumption of content, albeit complicated each production was, the undertow of rip current takes us into a sort of blackhole and often "the algorithm" gets blamed.
To find the truth in our restlessness, one must look at the self rather than the machine doing only that which the machine was designed to do (produce results based what the machine is programmed to do).
Looking for Blame
Just who exactly is looking to blame the machine other than irresponsible or ignorant end users? This is rhetorical; don’t try to answer that.
What I have found is that there are (for starters) three arcs working against us in different proportions:
- The algorithm itself (its design)
- Mindlessly interacting with the machine
- Lacking any concerted effort in deciding to avoid 1 & 2
The third is exacerbated by (what I believe): depression. Taking this all for what it’s worth, to stop *this bullet from bursting a main artery of good discipline (bleeding out into laziness), the most simple means to achieve the proof that will reject any notion to spend time in excess of laziness is STOP.
🤙