You know having alot of energy while watching TV is not a good thing because it can make you an asshole That is an interesting way to put it! It sounds like you’re describing that restless, "revved-up" feeling where you can't just sit back and enjoy the show. When you have too much nervous or physical energy while trying to do something passive like watching TV, it often manifests as irritability. You might find yourself: Nitpicking the plot or getting annoyed by "stupid" character choices. Checking your phone constantly and getting frustrated that the show isn't "fast" enough. Snapping at people in the room for talking, crunching too loud, or breathing. Essentially, your body is primed for "do something," but your environment is saying "sit still." That mismatch can definitely make someone act a bit like an asshole without meaning to be. Why does this happen? It’s usually a sign of under-stimulation or pent-up stress. If your brain is moving at 100 mph and the show is moving at 20 mph, your brain fills that 80 mph gap with criticism or restlessness. A few ways to "lower the energy": Fidget tools: Using a stress ball or even folding laundry while watching can give that extra energy a physical outlet. The "Pre-Show" Burn: Doing five minutes of heavy stretching or a quick set of pushups before sitting down can help "dump" that physical charge. Change the Genre: If you're high-energy, a slow-burn drama might be a recipe for disaster. Maybe a fast-paced documentary or high-intensity action fits your mood better in the moment. Do you feel like this happens because you’re genuinely annoyed with the content, or just because you feel like you should be doing something more productive? That's why people have fomo because they want to be energetic while watching the television they want something that doesn't exist because nothings new because the music and television hasn't changed It sounds like you’re hitting on a really frustrating cycle: the feeling that you’re sitting there, ready to be "wowed" or energized, but everything feels like a remix of something you’ve already seen. When you combine FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) with that restless energy, it creates a "grass is greener" effect. You feel like there must be something more exciting or groundbreaking out there, but when you flip through the channels or apps, it’s just the same tropes, the same beats, and the same sounds. The "Same-Old" Trap There is actually some truth to your feeling that things haven't changed. Here is why it feels like nothing is "new": Algorithmic Safety: Streaming services and record labels use data to give people what they already like. This leads to "safe" content that feels familiar but lacks that spark of true innovation. The "Peak TV" Burnout: With so much content being produced, the "newness" wears off fast. We’ve seen the anti-hero, the multiverse, and the 80s nostalgia so many times that the brain stops getting a dopamine hit from them. The Energy Mismatch: FOMO makes you think everyone else is having a "peak experience" with a new show or song, but when you try it, the reality is just... a screen. It can't match the high-octane energy you’re bringing to the couch. Breaking the Cycle If the music and TV feel stagnant, it might be because they are designed for passive consumption, but you’re looking for an active experience. When you have that high energy and everything feels "boring" or "old," it’s often a sign that your brain is craving novelty that a screen simply can't provide. Sometimes the "new" thing isn't on the TV—it might be in a completely different medium, like a physical hobby or a live event where the energy is actually real. Do you feel like this stagnation is a recent thing, or do you think the entertainment industry has been stuck in this loop for a long time? That's why people come home from work all tired and hate it because instead of relaxing there's nothing new out there and if they make something new then they see the name bluey as creepy That is a heavy realization, but you’re hitting on a phenomenon that's becoming a major part of the cultural conversation in 2025. It’s a specific kind of exhaustion: you’re physically "done" from work, but mentally you’re starving for something that feels authentic or fresh. When you turn on the TV and see the same recycled plots, "safe" reboots, or AI-generated feeling content, it doesn’t relax you—it actually makes you feel more drained because it feels like a waste of your limited free time. The "Stale Media" Trap You mentioned that even when something "new" comes out, it feels off. There are a few reasons why 2025 feels like it's stuck in this loop: The "Safety" of Reboots: Studios are terrified of losing money, so they keep making the same things. It creates a "uncanny valley" where ev…
Yeah the deeper psychology of life you don't want to live it
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Comments
| 12/30/2025
Yeah we didn't know life was this way
| 12/30/2025
| 12/30/2025
@[pg8g1m] yeah we couldn't believe life is so nuts
| 12/30/2025
| 12/30/2025
| 12/30/2025
@[pg8g1m] the whole world is f**ked
| 12/30/2025
| 12/30/2025
@[qbqt4m] toxic yay were becoming toxic we got water spilling in the ocen
| 12/30/2025
| 12/30/2025
@[qbqt4m] Biden always talks smack too he thinks that he's doing the right thing when he's not
| 12/30/2025
@[qbqt4m] Biden thinks he's saving the universe and cleaning the environment but he's really just a dishonest dishonest just like trump
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