THE AGE OF PERPETUAL AGITATION
Why
So Many People Feel Angry, Exhausted, and Unsettled
Bill Conley
America's Favorite Life Coach
Have you noticed it?
Something feels different.
The world seems louder than it used
to be. More hostile. More divided. More anxious. Conversations that once took
place with civility now quickly devolve into arguments. Families avoid
discussing politics. Friends walk carefully around controversial subjects.
Strangers lash out over minor inconveniences. Social media has become a
battleground. News broadcasts feel like endless emergency alerts. Every day
appears to bring a new crisis, a new outrage, a new reason to fear what
tomorrow may bring.
Across every continent and within
nearly every nation, people seem to be carrying a burden they cannot quite
define. It is visible in their faces. It is heard in their voices. It reveals
itself in their impatience, frustration, and growing sense of hopelessness.
Many are struggling financially.
Others are worried about the future. Some fear war. Some fear economic
collapse. Others fear cultural change, political instability, crime, or the
loss of freedoms they once took for granted. Regardless of the specific concern,
the result is remarkably similar.
People are uneasy.
People are angry.
People are exhausted.
And perhaps most concerning of all,
people are becoming accustomed to living in a constant state of emotional
agitation.
The average person wakes up and
immediately reaches for a phone. Before their feet touch the floor, they are
greeted by a stream of alarming headlines, political arguments, economic fears,
international conflicts, and endless commentary designed to provoke an
emotional response.
Before breakfast, they have already
been told what to fear.
Before lunch, they have been told
who to blame.
Before dinner, they have been
reminded why they should be outraged.
Day after day.
Week after week.
Year after year.
The human mind was never designed to
absorb a constant torrent of negativity from every corner of the globe. For
most of human history, people focused on their families, their communities,
their work, and the events occurring within their immediate surroundings.
Today, however, a person in Florida
can be emotionally consumed by a conflict thousands of miles away. A resident
of Canada can spend an entire afternoon arguing about events occurring in
Europe. A citizen of Australia can become enraged over political disputes in
America.
Technology has connected humanity in
unprecedented ways. Yet it has also created a situation where people carry the
emotional weight of the entire world on their shoulders.
The result is predictable.
Anxiety rises.
Depression grows.
Trust declines.
Anger spreads.
Relationships suffer.
Communities weaken.
People begin viewing one another not
as neighbors but as opponents.
Some observers believe this is
simply the natural consequence of technological advancement. Others argue that
modern media organizations have discovered that fear, outrage, and conflict
generate attention, engagement, and profit.
Still others believe something
deeper is occurring.
They believe the constant atmosphere
of conflict serves a larger purpose.
Whether one agrees with that
perspective or not, it is difficult to deny that division has become one of the
defining characteristics of modern life.
Every issue appears to be framed as
a battle.
Every disagreement becomes a war.
Every opposing opinion is portrayed
as an existential threat.
The middle ground seems to be
disappearing.
Nuance is vanishing.
Reasonable discussion is becoming
increasingly rare.
Many people now find themselves
living in a state of perpetual emotional readiness, as though something
terrible is always about to happen.
This is not healthy.
It is not sustainable.
And perhaps most importantly, it is
not necessary.
There comes a point when every
individual must ask a simple question.
How much of this am I allowing into
my life?
Because while we may not be able to
control global events, we can control how much access those events have to our
minds, our emotions, and our daily lives.
Perhaps the greatest act of self-preservation
in modern society is learning when to disconnect.
Not from reality.
Not from responsibility.
But from the endless cycle of
manufactured outrage that seeks to dominate our attention every waking hour.
The purpose of this article is not
to convince readers to ignore the world around them. Rather, it is to encourage
them to recognize the profound effect that constant exposure to negativity has
on the human spirit.
If we are not careful, we become
what we consume.
And if all we consume is anger,
fear, division, and conflict, it should surprise no one when those same emotions
begin to define our lives.
The question before us is simple.
Can we remain informed without
becoming consumed?
Can we stay aware without becoming
angry?
Can we live in a troubled world
without allowing the troubles of the world to dominate our minds?
The answer may determine not only
our personal happiness but also the future health of our families, communities,
and society itself.
For many people, life has become an
endless cycle of reaction.
They react to headlines.
They react to political speeches.
They react to social media posts.
They react to economic reports.
They react to wars, rumors of wars,
scandals, controversies, and crises.
Rarely do they have the opportunity
to simply live.
Instead, they are constantly responding
to stimuli that arrive every minute of every day from every corner of the
globe.
The result is a population that is
emotionally exhausted.
Psychologists often refer to this
phenomenon as information overload. The human brain is remarkably powerful, but
it has limitations. It was designed to solve problems, build relationships,
raise families, and contribute to communities. It was not designed to absorb
thousands of emotionally charged messages every single day.
Yet that is exactly what many people
experience.
A generation ago, people watched the
evening news for thirty minutes and read the morning newspaper. Today, news
follows them everywhere. It sits in their pocket. It appears on their watches.
It interrupts their workday. It accompanies them to dinner. It follows them
into the bedroom before they sleep.
There is no escape.
Or at least that is what many have
come to believe.
The modern media environment
operates on a simple reality.
Attention is valuable.
The longer someone watches, clicks,
scrolls, and engages, the more profitable they become.
Unfortunately, calmness does not
generate attention nearly as effectively as conflict.
Fear attracts attention.
Anger attracts attention.
Outrage attracts attention.
Conflict attracts attention.
Human beings are naturally drawn
toward threats because survival instincts have been part of our nature since
the beginning of time. News organizations, advertisers, political movements,
social media platforms, and countless other institutions understand this reality.
The result is an environment where
negativity often receives greater visibility than positivity.
A plane landing safely is not news.
A plane crash is.
Millions of happy marriages are not
headlines.
One celebrity divorce becomes a national discussion.
Thousands of peaceful communities
receive little attention.
One violent incident dominates the
news cycle.
Gradually, people begin to develop a
distorted perception of reality.
The world starts to appear darker
than it truly is.
Danger seems closer than it actually
is.
Conflict appears more common than
cooperation.
Fear begins replacing gratitude.
Suspicion begins replacing trust.
This does not mean problems do not
exist.
They do.
Wars exist.
Poverty exists.
Crime exists.
Corruption exists.
Human suffering is real.
But there is a difference between
acknowledging problems and becoming consumed by them.
Many people have crossed that line
without realizing it.
They spend hours each day absorbing
negative information while spending very little time focusing on the blessings
immediately surrounding them.
Their families.
Their friends.
Their faith.
Their health.
Their opportunities.
Their communities.
The simple joys of everyday life.
Slowly, these blessings become
overshadowed by distant events over which they have little or no control.
This creates a dangerous
psychological condition.
The constant feeling of
helplessness.
Imagine being repeatedly exposed to
problems you cannot solve.
A war on another continent.
A political dispute in another
state.
An economic policy decided by people
you will never meet.
A crisis unfolding thousands of
miles away.
You hear about it.
You think about it.
You worry about it.
You discuss it.
Yet there is almost nothing you can
do to influence the outcome.
Over time, this can create
frustration, anxiety, and hopelessness.
The human mind craves agency.
It wants to solve problems.
It wants to improve circumstances.
It wants to make a difference.
When people are continuously exposed
to situations they cannot change, they often become angry.
Not because they are naturally angry
people.
Because they feel powerless.
Powerlessness frequently manifests
itself as frustration.
Frustration often becomes anger.
Anger eventually becomes hostility.
Hostility spreads throughout
society.
This is one reason so many seemingly
minor interactions now escalate into major confrontations.
People are carrying emotional
burdens that have nothing to do with the moment in front of them.
The disagreement in the grocery
store is not really about the grocery store.
The argument at the gas station is
not really about the gas station.
The road rage incident is not really
about traffic.
Those moments simply become outlets
for emotions that have been accumulating for months or even years.
The pressure builds.
Eventually, something releases it.
Unfortunately, modern society
provides very few opportunities for emotional recovery.
Many people no longer spend time in
nature.
They no longer sit quietly with
their thoughts.
They no longer enjoy meaningful
conversations without interruptions.
They no longer experience extended
periods away from screens.
Silence has become rare.
Reflection has become rare.
Peace has become rare.
Instead, many people live in a
constant state of stimulation.
Every spare moment is filled.
A notification.
A headline.
A video.
A podcast.
A debate.
A controversy.
A crisis.
The mind never rests.
The spirit never recovers.
The emotions never settle.
This continuous stimulation creates
a population that feels perpetually unsettled.
People begin waking up tired.
They feel emotionally drained before
the day even begins.
They become impatient.
They become cynical.
They become suspicious.
They lose faith in institutions.
They lose faith in leaders.
Sometimes they even lose faith in
one another.
Perhaps the greatest tragedy is that
many have forgotten what peace feels like.
Peace is not ignorance.
Peace is not denial.
Peace is not pretending problems do
not exist.
Peace is the deliberate decision to
refuse to allow every problem in the world to occupy permanent residence in
your mind.
Peace comes from recognizing limits.
You cannot solve every conflict.
You cannot correct every injustice.
You cannot influence every government.
You cannot fix every problem.
But you can choose how you spend
your attention.
You can choose what enters your
mind.
You can choose what influences your
emotions.
You can choose what kind of
environment you create for yourself and your family.
For some people, that may mean
reducing exposure to news.
For others, it may mean eliminating
social media.
For others, it may mean setting
boundaries around media consumption.
Perhaps checking the news once a day
rather than every hour.
Perhaps spending more time reading
books than scrolling feeds.
Perhaps taking walks without a
phone.
Perhaps having dinner conversations
that focus on life rather than politics.
Perhaps rediscovering hobbies,
faith, friendships, and activities that nourish the soul rather than drain it.
The world will continue turning.
The headlines will continue
appearing.
The controversies will continue
emerging.
The arguments will continue raging.
But that does not mean they must
dominate your life.
At some point, every person must
decide whether they are going to spend their days living or merely reacting.
That choice may be one of the most
important decisions of our time.
While we cannot control the
storms that surround us, we can decide whether we allow those storms to take
root within us.
And in a world increasingly defined
by agitation, choosing peace may become one of the most revolutionary acts a
person can undertake.
Conclusion
Reclaiming
Your Mind, Reclaiming Your Life
Perhaps the greatest battle of our
time is not being fought on distant battlefields.
It is not being fought in government
buildings.
It is not being fought in corporate
boardrooms.
It is being fought within the human
mind.
Every day, billions of people awaken
and are immediately confronted with a choice they often do not realize they are
making.
Will they control their thoughts?
Or will someone else control them?
Will they decide what deserves their
attention?
Or will they surrender their
attention to whatever headline, controversy, crisis, or outrage happens to
appear before them?
For generations, people understood
that peace was something to be protected. It was something cultivated within
families, communities, and individual lives. Today, however, peace has become
increasingly difficult to find because the modern world constantly competes for
our attention.
The competition never ends.
The next alert is waiting.
The next controversy is waiting.
The next political argument is
waiting.
The next crisis is waiting.
The next reason to be angry is
waiting.
The next reason to be afraid is
waiting.
Many people have unknowingly become
prisoners of this cycle.
They wake up anxious.
They spend their day irritated.
They go to bed frustrated.
Then they repeat the process again
tomorrow.
Weeks become months.
Months become years.
Years become decades.
And somewhere along the way, they
discover that they have spent much of their lives reacting to events they could
neither control nor change.
What a tragic way to spend the
precious gift of life.
Consider, for a moment, the countless
beautiful things that continue to exist despite all the turmoil in the world.
Children still laugh.
Families still gather around dinner
tables.
Friendships still flourish.
Sunrises still paint the morning
sky.
Birds still sing.
Couples still fall in love.
Neighbors still help one another.
Communities still come together
during difficult times.
Acts of kindness still occur every
day.
Yet these stories rarely dominate the
headlines.
They rarely trend online.
They rarely become national
conversations.
Not because they are unimportant.
But because they are ordinary.
And ordinary goodness often receives
less attention than extraordinary conflict.
This creates an illusion.
The illusion that darkness is
winning.
The illusion that society is
collapsing.
The illusion that humanity has lost
its way.
While problems certainly exist,
reality is often far more balanced than the picture being presented to us.
Millions of decent people wake up
every morning and attempt to live honorable lives.
They work hard.
They raise families.
They care for aging parents.
They volunteer.
They worship.
They serve their communities.
They help strangers.
They contribute positively to the
world around them.
These people seldom make headlines.
Yet they remain the foundation upon
which civilization continues to stand.
Perhaps that is why it is so
important to occasionally step away from the noise.
Not forever.
Not out of ignorance.
Not because we do not care.
But because the human spirit
requires moments of recovery.
Just as the body needs rest, the
mind requires rest as well.
Imagine what might happen if more
people intentionally disconnected from the endless stream of outrage.
Imagine if they spent less time
arguing with strangers online and more time talking with friends face to face.
Imagine if they replaced an hour of
news consumption with an hour of walking, reading, praying, creating,
gardening, exercising, or spending time with loved ones.
Imagine if they focused more energy
on improving their own communities than worrying about every controversy
occurring around the globe.
Imagine if they spent more time
nurturing gratitude than feeding resentment.
Would society become weaker?
Or would it become stronger?
Would people become less informed?
Or would they become more
thoughtful?
Would communities suffer?
Or would they thrive?
The answer may be more obvious than
we realize.
History teaches us that strong societies
are not built by anxious populations living in perpetual fear.
They are built by people who possess
purpose.
People who possess hope.
People who possess resilience.
People who possess faith in
something greater than themselves.
People who understand that while
they cannot control everything, they can control how they respond.
That is where true power resides.
Not in controlling world events.
Not in winning every argument.
Not in consuming every piece of
information.
But in mastering one's own thoughts,
emotions, and actions.
The world may remain turbulent.
The headlines may remain alarming.
The divisions may remain visible.
The conflicts may continue.
Yet none of those realities requires
you to surrender your peace.
You still possess the ability to
choose what enters your mind.
You still possess the ability to
choose how you spend your time.
You still possess the ability to
choose gratitude over bitterness.
You still possess the ability to
choose hope over despair.
You still possess the ability to
choose calmness over agitation.
You still possess the ability to
choose joy over anger.
And perhaps that is the most
important lesson of all.
The world may be loud.
But you do not have to be.
The world may be angry.
But you do not have to be.
The world may be divided.
But you do not have to contribute to
the division.
The world may be consumed by
conflict.
But you can choose peace.
In the end, peace is not found by
changing every problem in the world.
Peace is found by refusing to allow
every problem in the world to take possession of your soul.
Protect your mind.
Protect your heart.
Protect your peace.
Turn off the noise when necessary.
Step away from the outrage.
Reconnect with the people you love.
Focus on the things you can control.
Invest your energy where it can make
a genuine difference.
And remember this timeless truth:
A life well lived is not measured by
how many crises you faced, how many arguments you joined, or how many
headlines you consumed.
A life well lived is measured by the
love you shared, the lives you touched, the kindness you offered, the purpose
you pursued, and the peace you carried within you.
The world desperately needs more of
that peace.
And it begins with each of us, one
choice at a time.
