If you are pushing against The Pull while mainly using a smartphone, then you're setting yourself up for a Herculean task. It is an all-purpose device that is not only a phone but also a messenger, email client, camera, calculator, flashlight, alarm clock, GPS, etc.| lessfoolish.substack.com
Thus far in this series—a guide to overcoming The Pull for good—we’ve covered the following:| lessfoolish.substack.com
It no longer feels like we are in a culture war but rather a spiritual one—an “unseen war,” as my Orthodox brothers and sisters call it. For secular-minded readers, an unseen war can be understood as a conflict in which one force seeks to capture attention and pull it away from what is most important—a.k.a., what’s most sacred.| lessfoolish.substack.com
I have been exploring the phenomenon of The Pull—the pulling sensation that comes from being addicted to the internet. The screens (computer and phone) are the physical source, and it is best understood through images:| lessfoolish.substack.com
You’re free. Congratulations. You made it to the other side. Something “popped.” No longer are you a slave to The Pull.| lessfoolish.substack.com
Click to read Less Foolish, by Peter Limberger, a Substack publication with tens of thousands of subscribers.| lessfoolish.substack.com
Its physical source is the screen, whether on a phone or computer. Its digital source comes from email, messaging apps, or social media. Its emotional source comes from various unspoken social expectations, FOMO, and an existential loneliness stemming from a lack of belonging and “feeling seen” outside the screen.| lessfoolish.substack.com
"The Look of Silence", a scandalous proposal, and a practical beginning| schooloftheunconformed.substack.com
This entry is part of a five-part series on “terrible communities”: 1.| lessfoolish.substack.com