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Gowri N Kishore's avatar

I was squirming as I read the first half of this essay. I felt like an insect under a microscope, being observed closely. I'm sure many others feel the same because this is a collective reality. A few things stood out for me. One, what you said about us treating experiences like acquisitions. It reminded me of the chapter in Four Thousand Weeks in which Oliver Burkeman talks about how the internet and connectedness has opened up whole new worlds and experiences for us, but also simultaneously made us feel our own limitations strongly because there is absolutely no way on earth that we can have all the exciting experiences that are out there. Two, what you said about the pressure to be on top of everything. Build wealth for parents, a future for children, health for ourselves... When I speak to older relatives, I get the sense that most of them didn't think about so much. They made do and did their best within the possibilities life offered. Whereas we now know how many of our contemporaries have FIREd and what causes our blood sugar to spike and who got promoted and every crime and injustice happening to humans and the planet in every corner of the world. We feel like we should know about all of this and not just that, also take steps towards solving/supporting them. It's a lot to deal with. No wonder we feel exhausted.

I like how your coping methods are all about cutting back, slowing down and making meaningful connections. In our bones, we know this is the only way. I think it's mainly FOMO that makes us hold onto old habits that don't serve us well anymore. I am trying to live the next few weeks differently and this essay came just at the right time. Thank you!

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Nirupama V's avatar

I kind of want to print this piece and make it the wallpaper--of my house. Reading it gave me solace. Thank you for writing this, Utsav!

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