Looking through my media feeds, including Lemmy, YouTube, News Outlets (Reuters, Financial Times) as well as news related to my profession, I would estimate that 85% of what I see is doom and gloom, i.e. reports about something that’s going wrong in the world or might go wrong in the future.

I try to limit what I follow to educational and unopininated sources (as far as that’s possible anyways) and some satire or a meme here and there. I don’t like suggestion algorithms and don’t use social media, because I don’t want to be trapped in a self-reinforcing bubble. On YouTube for example, I use third party apps which show me only videos from channels I explicitly follow.

Still, it’s mostly depressing information: how bad the job market and economy is, geopolitical threats, AI risks, symptoms of late stage capitalism. I am aware, thanks. But I didn’t ask to hear these things over and over and over again, and it’s negatively affecting my outlook on life. I’ve given up on reading the news entirely because I just get triggered by the enshittification of society, politics, the environment and daily life where I live. At this point I’d rather not hear about it anymore.

What I want to ask is whether you are having the same experience? Am I doing something fundamentally wrong? I don’t want to be blind to what’s happening in my/the world, but I want to have a positive and optimistic outlook on the future. How can I make that happen? How can I get away from an engagement economy constantly bombarding me with bad news without giving up on learning about the things that I am interested in?

3 points

It’s hopeless, you’ll never escape it!

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4 points
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Where do I sign up to your feed?

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4 points
3 points
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Cool!! I came for gloom but found a happy bear family. And a really shitty game. But shitty in a good way.

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2 points

Also https://swg-empire.de/post/2172957

I actually have a reminder to post these each week to try and think about something positive.

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9 points

Look into solarpunk

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1 point

Wow, I am super intrigued. Thanks for the suggestion!

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2 points

Glad to help!

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2 points

Just be careful, slrpnk.net can also have a lot of doomerism. I like the instance though

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3 points

Just avoid following climate and collapse x)

I myself do not follow them lol

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3 points

True.

I’d recommend curating the ‘subscriptions’ feed first (also set it as the default), and then only browse the ‘all’ feed selectively.

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0 points

I have no good suggestions, just wanted to say I feel the same way as you do. I want to believe the human quality of life on average is better than it’s ever been, but if I look at unfiltered media it’s all doom and gloom. I’ve now completely stopped watching/reading news because of what it does to my mental health. Even then I still end up finding out about things.

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3 points

Echoing solarpunk! Along those same lines is “hopepunk”. I like to think of my media consumption in a similar way to my diet and consider how much I need from different areas to stay balanced. It is hard to fully escape the doomerism narratives but seeking out generative, hopeful narratives has made a difference in how much I find myself disrupted by them. Also poetry can be a great way to explore the heavier subjects and often where I head when I get overwhelmed.

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7 points

Stay away from echo chambering news sources. New Republic, HuffPost, Commondreams and the like. They’ll either go full outrage or tell you exactly what you’ve been waiting to hear.

Indy journalism can be solid, you just have to be careful.

I enjoy Heather Cox Richardson. She definitely leans left but everything is so steeped in the context of American History (she’s an American historian) it’s not doom and gloom so much as educational. Historical context adds depth and width to the present issues. Accessible. She’d be a good professor to attend classes with not a boring one.

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1 point

I will look into indy journalism, thanks for the recommendation! Never gave it much thought but it makes total sense. Is substack the best place to look or are there other places you can recommend?

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2 points

She definitely leans left

she explicitly self-ids as a “lincoln republican” so no, that’s definitely not true

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