Also, I've written extensively (quoting Robert Wright) how evolution has left us with inherent nature that makes it exceedingly difficult to be happy. Any creature who was content was competed out of the gene pool; driven, uptight, and envious individuals tended to pass on their genes. In the dangerous world of our far ancestors, seeing threats everywhere was, sadly, a winning genetic strategy.
Now, "the best minds of my generation" spend their lives perfecting algorithms that manipulate our evolutionary heritage to optimally demand our attention. Anger, outrage, and tribalism gobble up our eyeballs.
We can intellectually recognize this, yet it is exceedingly hard to escape it. Even if we logically know the world is so much better, when the vast majority of "our side" are posting Doom Dogma, we simply can't help but emotionally absorb this worldview.
This comes to mind when Hank Green quotes a Leftie's tweet, "Although there are problems in the third world, at least they eat real food." [OMFG]
Or when Vox's article on the recovery of the green sea turtle is about how "scientists are worried."
Or in Vox's "Good News," the author whines that people shouldn't need Ozempic, just diet and exercise. (Just like people with mental illness just need to "toughen up.") (Generally, however, the "Good News" is pretty good; example.)
I could go on, but if you doubt that the "news" and "social" media are constant drumbeats of negativity ... well, either "What?" or "Congratulations!"
The prescription, I believe, is clear:
Diet and exercise.
Just kidding!
It is actually harder than diet and exercise. We have to log off from the news and get out from under the algorithms.
If you are trying to lose weight, you wouldn't let a stream of donuts and chips flow into your house. If you were fighting a a chemical addiction, you wouldn't sit in front of a plate of cocaine for hours a day.
As I've written elsewhere:
Taking in horror after horror doesn’t make you a good person. Making a difference makes you a good person.
Choose where you can make a difference. You don’t need to know everything. You don’t need to read or watch everything. As Nobel Laureate (and one of Anne’s colleagues at Carnegie Mellon) Herb Simon said: “[A] wealth of information creates a poverty of attention.” (Quoted in our fellow Illini Nick Offerman’s Gumption.)
Relatedly, as Matthew Yglesias said, “One shouldn’t be complacent about the problems in the world, but one should avoid frustration about them.” (Offered even though you should never trust anyone named Matt.)
You don’t need to be depressed. You don’t deserve to be depressed. You can be happy and still make a difference. Indeed, I would contend that being happy makes it easier to make a difference over the long haul – both in your ability to work constructively and in the example you set for others.

























