The Scroll and the Nervous System
Distraction used to be a lapse. Now it is an environment. We tend to describe modern life as overstimulating, fast-paced, overwhelming. But that language implies something temporary — a season of intensity that will eventually settle. What if it is not temporary? What if the human nervous system is being quietly redesigned by the architecture of digital life? Humanity is not just distracted. It is restructured. Neural pathways are adaptive. The brain strengthens what it repeats. When we engage in deep reading, we build endurance for complexity. When we sustain attention on a single idea, we strengthen integration. But when we live in scroll-speed cognition — headline, image, swipe, reaction — we train a different capacity. Rapid scanning. Quick judgment. Immediate emotional response. Depth becomes effortful. Reaction becomes default. Digital platforms are not neutral corridors of information. They are engineered ecosystems optimized for engagement. Infinite scroll removes natural stopp...