Journey Jovial - Too much news?
Journey Jovial is the next step on the personal A-Z Ethical Revolution.
ethicalrevolution.co.uk/journe…
A big part of Sam's advice here is not to get overwhelmed and anxious by the barrage of negative news. This advice wasn't timed for this particular point in time, but it couldn't be more apt. Indeed, I have been memorized by the train wreck of Trump's first weeks in office, and actually, I feel it's right not to look away. Nor to look away from the ongoing genocide in Gaza, or the war in Congo that is affecting families of people I know. On the other hand, it's true - I am suffering from information overload spending so much time on the computer reading stuff.
Sam's advice is get news from trusted sources - he suggests a few- and don't feel like you have to keep up with it everyday.
The primary source he suggests is The Conversation, in which journalists work with academic experts to produce a variety of articles on current events and developments in many fields. It is good...but let's see, I'm already getting daily to weekly newsletters from several sources, adding another might be counterproductive to the intent of this step?
I do daily peruse the headlines from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:C… as a RSS feed; it's very succinct, but alerts me to events happening in parts of the world I might not otherwise hear about.
In addition, I get a daily newsletter of local news from 'Town and County', a feed of mainly environmental Canadian news from The Narwhal (several articles a week, but I usually only look at the first paragraph), a weekly newsletter from Global Voices, and Good Sunday Morning, a weekly letter from Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May which is always very interesting. Now I've added a twice weekly digest from the Conversation Global. Then there's a couple weekly and various other sporadic newsletters related to my profession. Too much?
I'm tempering this by reminding myself I don't need to keep up with all the internet news on a daily basis, or keep checking them every hour as I am wont to do. I have them going to a feed reader (Inoreader) rather than cluttering up my email.
And then there's my two print hardcopy newsmagazines (one leftleaning but mainstream, one more radical) that I subscribe to, and more to the point, actually read - I'm proud of that. And once in awhile I listen to the Canada Broadcasting Corp. news on the radio
I realized I've got my news sources corralled quite well; the real problem for me is social media, even though I have been very selective with my social media sources including this lovely Friendica instance, it is an endless source of stimulation that can easily become too much, and this is where I really need to be more selective with my time. At least leave it until the end of the day.
How do you get your news and how do you feel about it?