@Hollahollara @dave @HiTwo@leafposter.club Bored men tend to find unhealthy distractions, whether it's women or YouTube Bros, or hyper-performative social justice.
@Hollahollara @dave @HiTwo@leafposter.club Also, some of these corners of the internet can be engaging, but also leave you feeling empty and depressed because they're just bursting with negative shit.
@Hollahollara @dave @HiTwo@leafposter.club I've known a few people, men in my case, be driven crazy by social media, in that it rewires their thinking. They stopped doing anything creative and just spent all their time arguing with people they don't know about things they don't care about.
@sullybiker @dave @HiTwo That seems so stressful…and tragic.
@sullybiker @dave @HiTwo But easy to find yourself entangled within, when you have no demands for busyness outside.
@Hollahollara @dave @HiTwo@leafposter.club A couple of years ago I spent a week at my dad's in Rural spain, before he had internet. It was weird being so antsy for three days, being out of contact with work and the socials, then after that I just didn't give a shit. It was liberating. Modern life is rubbish.
@Hollahollara @dave @HiTwo@leafposter.club There's an interview with Jamie Kilstein (who I still regard as a bit of a shit) on Rogan where he actually describes this process perfectly. Living for the rage rush.
@sullybiker @dave @HiTwo It satisfies something, for a little bit. Then, the cumulative result is not something aspirational, I suppose. It is inert, at best.
@Hollahollara @dave @HiTwo@leafposter.club Being angry and agitated all the time is miserable.
@sullybiker @dave @HiTwo Women find distractions, too. When I was most bored, I was obsessed with the most nihilistic stuff. I am sure it started as intriguing and fact-finding. Any of these parts are parts of life, true, but when you fill your hours with individually-unsolvable problems, the result is not favorable to achievement or well-being.