The Cost of Our Malaise Part 1: Breaking the Autopilot

It’s with a deep sense of sadness that I find myself writing this, because something doesn’t feel right anymore. With us. With humanity.

We’ve become so estranged from one another that life itself feels less safe and joy-filled. Getting along...really getting along...now feels emotionally fraught, brittle, and exhausting. I keep trying to pinpoint the moment it tipped (COVID is a strong contender); when the manageable became overwhelming, and our usual coping mechanisms quietly failed us. Now, we are left flailing in a sea of uncertainty, each of us pretending we’re fine while sensing, deep down, that we are not.

Am I usually optimistic? One hundred percent. Am I questioning our collective fortitude right now? For damn sure.

What will it take to emerge from this chaotic mix of polarising circumstances? East vs. West, Left vs. Right, Man vs. Woman… the list of divisions is endless. My first inclination is prayer. My second is small, revolutionary acts.

Maybe it’s time we woke up and checked back in on life. Really checked in. We’ve been operating on automatic for too long, handing our power over to systems and algorithms that treat us like data points rather than souls. We chose convenience and comfort, but we forgot that those things are often the ultimate betrayal of the spirit.

We were raised on Hollywood projections and a McDonald’s idea of nourishment. We divested from our own autonomy willingly, trading our intuition for a "user-friendly" life...until the cost of our malaise became our humanity.

So, what do we do?

The answer isn't a louder platform or a shinier life. It’s smaller circles and truer stories. It is time to stop performing and start inhabiting our lives again...our real lives, rooted in time and geography, not on small screens. This is a call to re-evaluate where we stand as a collective, outside the influence of big tech and government.

The reset we’re longing for doesn’t begin "out there." It begins here: with a quiet prayer, a difficult conversation, and the radical, revolutionary act of choosing to be human again in the real world.

How do we begin?

To move from a feeling of malaise to a state of ownership, we must break the "automatic" loops we’ve fallen into. These small disruptions are designed to reconnect you to your life immediately:

The 5-Minute Witness: Reawaken your senses.

Sit in a public space (a park, a cafe, a bus stop) for five minutes without a phone, book, or headphones. Your only job is to notice three small details about the people or the environment around you that you would usually miss.

Identify one thing you usually do for "convenience"

Example, ordering an app-based meal, using the self-checkout, or using AI for self-reflection instead of sitting with your own thoughts. Today, choose the manual version. Walk, talk to the cashier, or cook. Sit with your feelings, good or bad; feel the "effort" and find pleasure in the doing.

Spend the first 30 minutes of your day without touching a screen.

No phone, no TV, no tablet. Wash your face, make coffee, or look out the window. Reclaim your morning from the "global feed."

Choose just one today and let’s reset how we live. Share in the comments how you are moving from autopilot to the driver’s seat. Let’s find ways together to reclaim ownership over our own lives.

Looking ahead...

Once we start reclaiming those small pockets of our day: those 30 minutes away from the screen or those five minutes on a park bench, something interesting happens. We start to notice the gap between who we are online and who we are when we’re just...us.

Later this week, I want to talk about the next step: dropping the act. We’ve spent years learning how to "post" our lives instead of living them, and it’s made us lonely in a way that’s hard to describe. I’ll be sharing some thoughts on how we can start telling truer stories to one another, the kind that don’t need a filter or a "like" to be valid. We’ll look at how to move past the performance and find our way back to real, unscripted conversation.

Until then, keep noticing the small things. I’ll see you back here in a few days. 

Comments

  1. I have slow leisurely baths once a week, scented and bubbly 😊

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    1. Evoking the senses is one powerful way of staying in the preswnt moment...also you leave the bathroom sharing your wonderful scent♡ Thank you for stopping by xoxo

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  2. I don’t like posting a lot about myself on social media myself. More often than not, there are lurkers who don’t intend to maintain a close connection with us which is an irony probably nobody saw coming when the social network became widely accessible to the world. I like to keep in touch with a few people but that also has a drawback as some dislike being spammed by reels. I wonder if this feeling of malaise has existed every generation in some way or other. I like to see myself as more of a realist but quite often I can be perceived as being an idealist, by friends & family as well as from personality tests.
    I went to a family tahlil this morning; my uncles and aunties are showing their ages - two in wheelchairs, 1 in hospital, a few with dementia. Not everyone could make it - one reason being health issues. What I appreciated seeing was that despite their ailments and occasional displeasure and frustration towards certain arrogant younger generations whom they believe are not improving the country’s economy, the oldest generation maintained their sense of humour even with the difficulties they are facing with old age. What I found most entertaining was when my eldest uncle from my mum’s side (he’s approaching 80 and uses a cane) showed us a collection of old postcards (complete with British stamps) from my Mum when she was a student in the UK 🇬🇧 in the 1960s-1970s. That was one of the previous forms of communication back then and the lurkers for postcards had a smaller audience.
    “It was when your parents were IN LOVE!” my eldest uncle purposely announced aloud, which made everyone laugh, including my own parents. My Mum’s youngest sister instructed me to read out loud some of the postcards, especially the ones from my Dad to my Mum and a few secrets were revealed that reflected their personalities back in their youth. For the sake of my parents I won’t say what was mentioned in the postcards but a few made me blush,l & squeal in laughter.

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    1. What a wonderful way of reconnecting across generations, I too can remember a few post cards I sent in my youth that is now blush worthy. The pleasure of a hand written note or postcard or even letters has become a dying art, but one we could revive, making our communication and responses one worth waiting for. I loved this window jnto an uplifting morning so much, and it has succeeded in lifting my spirits xoxo

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    2. 🤗💜🪷 Alhamdulillah

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