oh i have feed wide filters for lemmy things in my boost app, hiding everything that has “Trump, Musk, Elon, Israel, Palestine, USA, Genocide” in the title. i don’t mind seeing the same meme 3 times a day, but i am taking active measures against being constantly reminded that the world is shit and misery is at every corner. The internet is great and all but the human tendency to report on tragedies instead of nice things is awful for my, and everyone’s, mental health. It’s always a “16 year old who was about to cure cancer died in a tragic accident” and never “92 year old grandma had ice cream that reminded her of her first love”, just ugh,
I know we’re wired to focus on the negatives and dangers for our own survival, but I don’t think nature ever planned for us to be able to access a constant stream of reports about everything going wrong on earth, this instinct was supposed to make sure we remember where the bears are so we don’t get killed, not make us depressed :(
“92 year old grandma had ice cream that reminded her of her first love”
"And as she looks upfront, she meets the eyes of her first love. Or of a wrinkled, bald version of him. The seventy four years spent together took a toll on his handsome looks.
The decades that they spent together also had their benefits, though. She didn’t need to say anything - he knows that ice cream reminds her of when they started dating, and she knows that he knows.
And some things don’t change. The smile that she sees on his face is still the same weird, goofy smile that she saw when she was still 18; he’d ride his bike all the way from the ice cream shop to her house, with two little servings. It is not a smile that you’d see in a magazine cover, it was a genuine smile of someone who’s happy.
It’s also the reason why she’d rather have her ice cream slightly melted. Her children always poked some light-hearted fun at that, saying stuff like “Mum would rather drink it than eat it.”
From the corner of her eye, she can also see her grandson. He was also busy with some ice cream - but instead of eating it, he was feeding it to his own daughter.
She really liked it vanilla."