When Screens Didn’t Dominate Every Waking Moment

Remember when family dinners didn’t include checking notifications between bites? There was something refreshingly straightforward about life before smartphones became extensions of our hands. People actually talked to each other without the constant distraction of glowing rectangles demanding attention every few seconds.
Recent research from 2025 found that three weeks of screen time reduction showed small to medium effect sizes on depressive symptoms, stress, sleep quality, and well-being. The study involved 111 healthy students with a mean screen time of 276 minutes per day, which honestly doesn’t sound that shocking anymore. According to the Digital 2023: Global Overview Report, Brazil is the second country with the highest screen time, especially among young people, drastically exceeding the recommended two hours per day.
The implications go deeper than we’d like to admit. One study found that adolescents who spend more than five hours per day on digital devices are 70% more likely to have suicidal thoughts or actions than those who spend less than an hour a day. That’s not just a statistic from some dusty research paper. That’s the reality of what constant connectivity has brought us.
The Lost Art of Face-to-Face Connection

Early in 2024, 30% of adults say they have experienced feelings of loneliness at least once a week over the past year, while 10% say they are lonely every day. Think about that for a moment. We’re more connected than ever through technology, yet we’ve never felt more isolated. In the demographic of young adults aged 18-24, the loneliness rate rises alarmingly, with 59% acknowledging its negative effects on their overall well-being.
In 2023, the US Surgeon General issued an Advisory and a framework for a national strategy on “our epidemic of loneliness and isolation”. This wasn’t some overblown political statement. An estimated 52 million people, based on Gallup’s current estimate, still struggle with loneliness across America alone.
What happened? We traded neighborhood barbecues for Instagram likes. We swapped Saturday morning coffee chats for Zoom calls. The intimacy of hearing someone’s voice, seeing their expressions change in real time, feeling their presence in a room has become somewhat of a luxury rather than the default mode of human interaction.
When Life Didn’t Cost an Arm and a Leg

Let’s be real here. The cost of just existing has become absurd. In 1985, the Cost-of-Thriving Index stood at 40 for the median male worker; at 43 for one with only a high school degree. Over the next 25 years, those values exploded. By 1992, COTI for the high school graduate had crossed the crucial 52-week threshold. Translation? A full year’s wages couldn’t even cover the basics anymore.
Sixty-five percent of Americans often considered “middle class” – those earning more than 200 percent of the federal poverty level – are struggling financially today and don’t expect that to change for the remainder of their lives, according to a poll commissioned by the National True Cost of Living Coalition. There’s something deeply unsettling about working harder than previous generations yet feeling like you’re constantly falling behind.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, consumer prices rose 3.2 percent from February 2023 to February 2024, with the cost of food specifically increasing 2.2 percent. Every grocery trip feels like a minor financial crisis these days. Housing? Don’t even get started on that nightmare.
Kids Who Actually Played Outside

There was a time when children roamed neighborhoods freely, building forts in backyards and coming home when the streetlights flickered on. Outdoor play and independent, neighborhood activity, both linked with healthy childhood development, have declined dramatically among Western children in recent decades. Outdoor play has decreased by 71 per cent in one generation in the US and UK.
Over the past 50 to 70 years, there has been a continuous decline in children’s opportunities to play freely, away from adult intervention and control. What changed? Beginning particularly in the 1980s, we developed a fear of allowing children to be outdoors unguarded by an adult. What was normal parenting before the 1980s of just sending your kids outdoors to play, that began to become regarded as negligent parenting because of fear that something terrible would happen to them.
The consequences aren’t trivial. A major cause of the decline in children’s mental health has been a gradual but ultimately huge decline in their opportunities to play, explore, and be part of the world without constant adult oversight. We’ve essentially bubble-wrapped childhood, and the results are showing up in therapist offices across the country.
Work That Actually Ended When You Left the Office

There was something beautifully uncomplicated about clocking out and being done for the day. No emails followed you home because there was no way for them to reach you. Your boss couldn’t text you at nine in the evening about a project deadline. Work existed in a specific place during specific hours, and then you got to live the rest of your actual life.
The boundaries have completely dissolved. Remote work sounded like freedom until we realized it meant work could invade every corner of our homes and every hour of our days. The kitchen table became a conference room. The bedroom became an office. There’s no escape, no clear separation between professional obligations and personal time.
People are burning out at alarming rates, and it’s not because we’re weaker than previous generations. It’s because we’re always on, always available, always expected to respond immediately. The pressure is relentless, and it’s taking a toll that shows up in anxiety disorders, sleep problems, and a general sense of exhaustion that no amount of vacation days seems to fix.