
I admit it…
I can’t keep up.
Not just because time is tight,
nor because life has become crowded with responsibilities,
but because the world… has started pouring into me without pause.
Every minute—every second—
dozens of things reach me:
news… analyses… videos… opinions… notifications… shocks… fears… and advice.
An entire world is thrown into my mind…
without me asking for it.
I open my phone to read a message…
and minutes—or hours—later,
I find myself jumping between dozens of topics:
A war here…
a crisis there…
a sharp political opinion…
a complex economic analysis…
a touching human story…
and a medical tip that might save a life.
Some of it is useful… yes.
But most of it… is not.
And yet… I read.
The question that haunts me:
How much time do we waste… just deciding what is worth reading?
And how much of that “choice”
is not really a choice…
but a response to what was imposed on us?
We don’t just consume information…
we are reshaped by it.
Even the ideas we reject…
pass through our minds,
leave a subtle trace,
then disappear.
But… do they really disappear?
Can an irrational idea,
one we glanced at briefly,
change something within us?
Can repeated messages—even superficial ones—
build a new pattern of thinking,
slipping into the self… without us noticing?
I think… yes.
Not because we are weak,
but because our minds were not built for this relentless flood.
The human mind was designed to contemplate,
not to be bombarded.
To choose,
not to be overwhelmed.
And here, a more dangerous question emerges:
Is there a hidden mind… shaping humanity’s consciousness?
Not necessarily a single person,
nor a conspiracy in the traditional sense…
But a system:
algorithms… platforms… interests…
pushing what we should see,
and hiding what we shouldn’t.
We think we choose…
while we are gently guided.
The problem is not information itself…
but the overflow of it.
A drop refreshes,
but a flood… drowns.
So how do we deal with this?
Not by withdrawing from the world,
nor by shutting everything out.
But by reclaiming our right to choose.
To ask, before we read:
Why am I reading this?
To slow down…
in a world that forces speed upon us.
To accept that we won’t know everything…
and that we shouldn’t.
Knowledge is not in quantity,
but in depth.
Not in what passes through our minds,
but in what stays within them.
Maybe the solution is not to “keep up”…
but to decide:
What is worth keeping up with…
and what should simply be allowed to pass.
I still… can’t keep up.
But I’m starting to learn…
that this isn’t a flaw.
Maybe…
it’s the beginning of understanding.


