I’ve been noticing an interesting phenomenon lately. The desire for slowing down and adopting an intentional way of consuming information.

For nearly two decades the internet trained us to read faster, scroll faster, react faster. But lately something unexpected is happening, people are starting to slow down again.

It feels like a quiet intellectual counter-movement has begun to take shape, and it may slowly be entering the mainstream. As a writer, I have to pay attention to these shifts. I’ve have been journaling and writing ever since I can remember. I’ve written around 1800 articles here on my blog for 17 years. So, I’m invested in how trends arounds reading, writing and publishing are evolving.

At first I wondered if this was just my reticular activating system at work, the phenomenon where once you notice a yellow flower, you suddenly start seeing yellow flowers everywhere. Maybe my brain was simply helping me cope with the idea that I can make a living writing full time.

But I don’t think that’s what’s happening.

For the past 15 to 20 years we’ve been living through an unprecedented era of information overload. Endless scrolling, algorithmic feeds, outrage cycles, and short-form dopamine spikes have shaped the way we consume ideas. What we might be witnessing now is a quiet rebellion against that attention economy.

There seems to be a growing sense for human intelligence to rise above the noise of machine speed and algorithmic optimization.

I’ve personally felt this assault on my senses for years now.

Ever since I saw the scale of social media, I’ve been always fretting about not going viral. Maybe my writing was not optimized for search engines? Maybe I should short form click-worthy content so it can spread fast?

But now, when I see the dozens of readers who find their way onto my blog organically every day, I understand they might be looking for something meaningful. Maybe they want this thought provoking, long form content. And after years of persisting, I now see hope in the form of this slow intellectual revolution.

Perhaps we are ready to put into action our burnout from dopamine hits, short form content and manufactured outrage. Maybe we are ready to optimize for something far older, deeper and what was natural: reflection, contemplation and free thinking.

I’m currently listening to Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth, and it captures this tension beautifully. Kingsnorth argues that modern technology systems shape human life toward speed, scale, and efficiency, often at the cost of meaning, community, and embodied experience.

In other words, we are slowly handing over our discretionary powers to machines. And if we aren’t careful, we risk losing something essential about human autonomy in the process.

But there are encouraging signs that the culture is pushing back.

The wild success of platforms like Substack, the rise of independent publishing, and the explosion of long-form podcasting suggest that the internet is rediscovering its appetite for depth. Algorithm isn’t everything anymore. I couldn’t have written a better climax, but the very internet that once rewarded speed and outrage may now be rediscovering its appetite for depth.

There’s this new talent company, @figures.company, that is seeking out creators irrespective of their social media follower status. Writers, thinkers, and niche creators can find ways to build audiences based on substance rather than virality. Imagine a world, where readers and thinkers connect directly without algorithms feeding us what it thinks we should be getting outraged about.

 

Sari Azout Bakalarz - figures.company  | Social Commentary by Rachana Nadella-Somayajula | Writer, Poet, Humorist

 

As we try to unlearn and relearn for ourselves, we are also building parallel intellectual ecosystems, book clubs, digital salons, reading circles, podcast debates etc. Makes me believe that TikTok Trends will soon become a thing of the past. The virality of The Catherine Project across the world makes me so happy. Their reading list is so hardcore full of classic texts, which forces you to slow read and think. You can find it HERE.

All of us have been doing the same exact thing in the name of progress, scaling, scrolling and alienating one another to get sucked into our own technology bubble. People seem to be rediscovering slowness as a cultural luxury now. After all, time is the only commodity that we truly own.

In fact, some thinkers argue that we may already be witnessing the beginning of a broader cultural shift.

Writer Jeff Giesea recently described what he calls a “humanities revolution.” According to him, three major forces are colliding to bring the contemplative life back into relevance. I’m somewhat paraphrasing here.

The first is institutional failure. Universities once held a monopoly on humanities discourse, but many people feel those institutions no longer provide the intellectual leadership they once did.

The second force is the digital information environment itself. Social media dismantled academic gatekeeping and democratized conversations about philosophy, politics, and culture. What replaced the old system is messier, sometimes shallower, but also more open, participatory, and alive.

And the third force is artificial intelligence. The rise of intelligent machines is forcing us to confront deeper questions about what it actually means to be human. Questions about agency, purpose, creativity, and consciousness are no longer abstract philosophical puzzles — they suddenly feel urgent.

You can read his article HERE.

The exponential rise of AI is paradoxically expediting the need for authentic voices to rise. AI can perform actions, but can never be a critical thinker on its own. Seeing AI slop all across social media and YouTube is bringing back people’s desire for lived experiences. And the audience for serious ideas is quietly reappearing.

Meanwhile, I will continue to explore the meaning of life, culture, and what it means to be human — and hopefully gather a few thoughtful readers along the way.

About The Article Author:

Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.

One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.

Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.

The Digital Literacy Project: Disrupting humanity’s technology addiction habits one truth at a time.

Truth About Technology – A Digital Literacy Project

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