Every day, you consume stories. News stories. Social media stories. Entertainment stories. Each one shapes how you see the world — what you believe is possible, what you think is true, what you feel you should care about.
But who's writing these stories? And more importantly — who benefits from you believing them?
The Attention Harvest
Media isn't free. You pay with your attention. And your attention is worth money — a lot of money. Every second you spend watching, scrolling, reading, is a second someone is monetising.
This creates an incentive structure. Content that grabs attention gets rewarded. Content that holds attention gets rewarded more. It doesn't matter if that content is true, helpful, or good for you. It only matters that you keep watching.
Fear grabs attention. Outrage grabs attention. Conflict grabs attention. So guess what you get fed?
The media doesn't show you the world. It shows you a version of the world designed to keep you watching.
The Nervous System Effect
Your body doesn't know the difference between a real threat and a story about a threat. When you watch news about disasters, conflicts, and crises, your nervous system responds as if those things are happening to you, right now.
Cortisol rises. Heart rate increases. You enter a low-grade stress state. And you stay there — because the stories never stop.
This isn't an accident. A stressed person is easier to influence. A scared person is easier to control. A distracted person doesn't ask difficult questions.
The Breath Break
Before you consume any media, take one conscious breath. After you finish, take another. This simple practice creates space between you and the content. It lets you observe your reactions instead of being swept away by them.
Ask yourself: How do I feel right now? More informed — or more anxious? More empowered — or more helpless?
Reclaiming Your Mind
You can't control what stories are told. But you can control which ones you let in. You can choose how much attention you give, and to whom. You can notice when you're being manipulated and step back.
The breath is your anchor. When the stories get loud, when the outrage machine is spinning, one conscious breath brings you back to reality. Your reality. The one you're actually living — not the one on the screen.