Brave Monday — Look Carefully at What You Reward

11/01/2026

Let's stop pretending this is harmless.

We are wasting our lives watching total fu........ nonsense — and calling it entertainment. Endless clips. Empty outrage. Stupid people doing stupid things for attention, clicks, and money. And we keep watching. Scrolling. Laughing. Sharing.

This is not neutral.
This is not "just fun."
This is cultural suicide.

A society that feeds on stupidity rots from the inside.

Your attention is power. Where you place it matters. What you reward grows. And right now, we are rewarding noise, vanity, cruelty, and emptiness — while ignoring people who are actually trying to do something good.

And yes, this is destroying mental health.

Here is a terrifying fact that should stop us cold:
Children in Britain now spend more time inside their homes than inmates spend inside prison cells.
Let that sink in.

Children — not criminals — are living more confined, more isolated, more screen-bound lives than prisoners.

And we wonder why anxiety is exploding.
Why attention spans are collapsing.
Why meaning feels harder to find.

A mind flooded with nonsense becomes restless.
A nervous system trained on constant stimulation cannot rest.
A culture addicted to distraction loses direction.

We keep asking why people feel anxious, depressed, angry, and lost — while spending hours every day consuming content designed to keep them numb, reactive, and addicted.

If we don't wake up, we are doomed.

Not because of one great disaster — but because we are slowly losing our ability to think, care, and choose wisely. When a society no longer knows what deserves attention, it has already begun to collapse.

This is not about becoming boring or serious all the time.
It's about refusing to poison your mind for amusement.

Stop wasting your time on total f....... nonsense.
Start paying attention to what builds you — and others — up.

Because if we don't change what we watch, what we reward, and who we admire, the future will belong to the loudest idiots in the room.

And that future is not one worth inheriting.

Best wishes from Raymond and Ken