Digital Detox Diaries
In a world where everyone wants to be online, live, and show their life online, getting intoxicated and addicted to digital life, here is a group of people who are living their lives in privacy, spending their time with their loved ones, spending their energy on the projects which we actually care about, and writing about those topics in ways we can truly express ourselves—not for likes, comments, follows, or according to algorithms to please people and attract traffic, but because we want to.
Yes, there are true creators who create genuine and good craft, but there aren’t enough viewers for them because they are making what they believe is true art, not what algorithms dictate to them to make, or what is cringe and popular right now.
Here, we are not saying digitalization is toxic, but we believe too much time on digital platforms, especially before reaching a mature age (the teenage stage), where you can understand these platforms, is toxic for your brain.
This is a simple start to encourage ourselves and the people around us to live more in real life instead of the digital matrix.
In a world where everyone is encouraged to live online, share every moment, and seek validation through likes, comments, and followers, we have chosen a different path.
We are a handful of people who value privacy, meaningful relationships, and intentional living. Instead of spending our time chasing trends or creating content to satisfy algorithms, we focus our energy on the people, ideas, and projects that genuinely matter to us.
This blog is a place where we write about those things—not because they are popular, but because they are meaningful. We believe creativity is at its best when it comes from genuine interest and self-expression rather than the pressure to attract attention or traffic.
There are many talented creators producing thoughtful and valuable work, yet much of it goes unnoticed because it doesn’t fit what algorithms currently reward. We admire those creators and the authenticity they bring to their craft.
We are not against technology or digitalization. The internet has created incredible opportunities to learn, connect, and create. However, we also believe that spending too much time on digital platforms, especially during the formative teenage years, can have a negative impact on how we think, feel, and experience the world.
This blog is our small attempt to encourage ourselves—and anyone who resonates with these ideas—to spend more time living in the real world, building meaningful connections, and creating things that matter. Not for algorithms, not for trends, but because we genuinely want to.
