There’s so much doom on social media right now. The environment is collapsing. The economy will crash. Civil rights are ending. Democracy is dead.

What keeps you going? Why do you still get up and go do what needs to be done when the world seems to be ending around us?

  • ch00f@lemmy.world
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    38 minutes ago

    Over the past few weeks, I realized that I wasn’t reading the news to “stay informed,” I was reading it because I was bored. As a form of entertainment, it’s pretty awful. 99% of what I read will have no direct impact on me or my family, and just sitting there and worrying about it without doing anything to fix it serves nobody.

    Also, I’ve learned to be skeptical of basically every headline good or bad. I saw a headline this week about how upset Trump supporters were with his cabinet picks. Comments in the thread were talking about leopards eating faces. The article was a collection of 8 tweets from supporters showing disapproval.

    This news site was just praying on people’s hopes and making a story out of absolutely nothing.

    So I started focusing on some personal hobbies and have tried to re-teach myself how to focus by reading some long form fiction.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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    23 minutes ago

    Stop caring and all of the problems go away, as if by magic. The amount of emotional energy that people put into issues that they’re unlikely to ever face is unbelievably wasteful.

  • Peter_Arbeitslos@feddit.org
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    1 hour ago

    In general, humanity (at least in Europe?) developed positively over the past few centuries. There were of course setbacks, but they didn’t last too long and sometimes even lead to great progress. Nevertheless we must fight for progress and shouldn’t give up just because the world once again seems to get even worse. Even more important when it comes to problems we have just a tiny period of time to fight against like climate change, we need to act now and can’t waste ten years being (ruled by) facists.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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      25 minutes ago

      That’s the crazy thing about all these echo chambers online. Everyone sits around convincing themselves that life is worse than it has ever been, when in reality it’s better in almost every way than it ever has been. Through constant struggle, our ancestors built us a world that is vastly easier to live in than ever before, yet many of us look at what is still left to improve and instead of facing that challenge, just complain loudly about the injustice of it all.

  • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Study of history.

    People have been prophesying the end times for millennia now, for this reason or that reason. I think that ultimately they just don’t like the basic fact that change of some sort or another is inevitable in the world, it will not remain static and no system or institution will last forever. This does not result in any concrete end, however.

    To quote Morpheus, “I remember that I am here not because of the path that lies before me, but because of the path that lies behind me.”

    There’s also a fair bit of profit-driven exaggeration in just how bad things really are in certain arenas. Bad news makes good clickbait, good/neutral news less so. So the ratio of bad to good news we receive is not actually representative of the full picture of what is happening in the world.

  • satanmat@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    My dog can’t feed herself. My family seems to like having me around.

    Get off of social media. Other than here I really keep my news to computer stuff that interests me

  • Nougat@fedia.io
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    2 hours ago

    Strike that. Reverse it.

    My lack of motivation prevents me from ending it all.

  • remon@ani.social
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    3 hours ago

    Running on hope isn’t sustainable in this world, you gotta run on spite!

  • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    I have a teenage son - a wonderful kid who keeps me going.

    Not sure what I’m going to do in my dead marriage after he moves out.

    • aasatru@kbin.earth
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      3 minutes ago

      Having children leave the house is a re-defining moment, just like establishing a family in the first place. It’s scary, but it comes with all kinds of possibilities as well.

      It sounds like you did a good job on reinventing yourself as a parent, of course trusting your judgment that your kid is indeed wonderful. But the fact that you love him enough that it keeps you going probably counts as further evidence that you’re not doing so bad.

      You’ll manage to reinvent yourself again. And if you can’t do it in your marriage, there’s no shame in doing it outside it.

    • ReanuKeeves@lemm.ee
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      3 hours ago

      There is a theory that natural human psychology wasn’t made to handle all of the world’s atrocities. People experience a “bad news burnout” because some of us constantly feel disappointed in humans as a race by hearing/seeing sociopathic behavior on an international level every day.

      • NineMileTower@lemmy.worldOP
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        3 hours ago

        I think I just hit that wall. This thread is fucking depressing. There’s happiness and hope out there, but it seems you won’t find it on social media, I guess. Negativity bias seems more prevalent on Lemmy than others.

        • ReanuKeeves@lemm.ee
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          2 hours ago

          There’s a reason why it’s common for people to occasionally want to camp out in the middle of nowhere with no technology for a bit. If I read about some horrible news like a grandma getting shot picking olives on her own land I try to follow it up with something more lighthearted such as kittens hugging puppies. Like eating pickled ginger as a pallette cleanser between sushi.

        • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          Negativity drives more clicks so therefore is more profitable for reporting KPI.

          I block any C that is news, local regional things, political, or US centric. That seems to kill off most negatively in a platform.

  • aasatru@kbin.earth
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    3 hours ago

    There’s still a bunch of kindness around. There’s good food to be eaten and culture to be consumed. There’s drinks to be had and friends to be made. Dances to learn and skills to master.

    There’s a lot of things to be hopeful about, aside from the whole everything going to shit thing. And if you can brighten up people’s lives by doing it, you might even contribute to the world going slightly less to shit.

    I think it’s time to recalibrate and focus more on the closer things. Doesn’t mean one should ignore the world, but we’re not fixing it by stressing out, doom-scrolling, and posting about it online either. We tried.

    • Ketram@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 hours ago

      I agree. The thing that keeps me going is the idea of finding community again.

      Not sure how many people in this thread are American, but we have a very independent point of view. The “optimal” way of living is leaving your parents, leaving your home, and building a new home somewhere else. We tend to be more independent overall and less likely to look to others for comfort, to our detriment. At least, that has been my experience.

      So I think the best thing to do is go out there, find a community that DOES care. Because they DO exist. Look for hobby classes, look for new friends in your interests, look for a church (if that is your thing. I am UU so the people at those churches are often some of the nicest, most leftist people around).

      I’m moving soon, and I think the thing that keeps me going is the idea of finding new community after I move. You can also affect meaningful change as a community when you can’t do it alone.

  • borf@lemmynsfw.com
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    2 hours ago

    In these difficult times I find that all I need is spending some time with my loved ones, enjoying my old favorite media and games and sharing them with my daughter, and nightly cuddles from my beautiful monster of a cat while I read web serials to unwind.

    Well, those things and also cannabis and escorts. And pizza. Keeps me going.