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Monday, May 18, 2026

YOU, ME, AND THE INFINITE SCROLL: A CANDID CONFESSION ABOUT LIFE ONLINE

 

YOU, ME, AND THE INFINITE SCROLL

A CANDID CONFESSION ABOUT LIFE ONLINE

A personal essay on how the internet went from a dial-up whisper to a 24/7 roar — and what that says about all of us.

In the Beginning, There Was the Dial-Up Scream

Let's be honest. The first time most of us used the internet, it sounded like a fax machine having an existential crisis.

You'd sit down at the family desktop — a beige monolith the size of a small refrigerator — and listen to the modem negotiate its way onto the web like two robots awkwardly shaking hands for the very first time. Ksshhh... bing... bong... EEEEEE. And then, after approximately one geological epoch, a webpage would load. Partially. The top half. You'd wait another three minutes for the bottom half, only to discover it was a GeoCities fan page for a mid-tier 1990s rock band, decorated with a spinning flame GIF and text in Comic Sans.

And you thought: This is the future. This is magnificent.

You weren't wrong, exactly. You were just magnificently early.

The Internet as a Library Nobody Organized

In those early days, the web was essentially a read-only digital library — except the librarian had gone home, the books were shelved in no particular order, and half the encyclopedias were written by enthusiastic strangers with strong opinions and questionable citations.

You didn't scroll the early internet. You searched it, cautiously, like an archaeologist brushing dust off something fragile. You typed a query into AltaVista or Ask Jeeves — yes, Jeeves, an actual cartoon butler — and received a list of ten blue links that may or may not have been remotely related to what you asked.

The dynamic was simple and, in retrospect, almost meditative:

  • A small group of people published content.
  • Everyone else read it.
  • Nobody argued in the comments, because there were no comments.
  • You closed the browser, went outside, and thought about what you'd read.

It was, by modern standards, profoundly quiet.

Then Everyone Got a Microphone

Somewhere around the mid-2000s, the internet handed every single human being on Earth a megaphone, a printing press, and a stage — simultaneously, with no instruction manual.

Blogging platforms arrived. Then MySpace. Then Facebook. Then Twitter. Then Instagram. Then TikTok. Then Bluesky. Each new platform arrived with the same implicit promise: your voice matters, your thoughts deserve an audience, and here is a little heart-shaped button to confirm it.

This was, genuinely, one of the most democratizing events in human history. Writers who couldn't get past a publishing gatekeeper found readers. Activists in isolated communities found movements. Educators with niche expertise found students. The internet became a read-write ecosystem — loud, collaborative, gloriously messy, and alive in a way the static web never was.

It also, let's be candid, gave a global platform to some truly spectacular nonsense.

The trade-off was always baked in. Open the gates wide enough to let the poets through, and you also let in the conspiracy theorists, the engagement baiters, and the people who will, with complete sincerity, argue about pineapple on pizza at 2:00 AM on a Tuesday.

We accepted the terms and conditions. We always do.

The Psychology of Why We Post (Or: The Mirror We Built and Can't Stop Looking Into)

Here is the part nobody puts in the brochure: social media is not really a communication tool. It is a psychological instrument dressed up as one.

When you craft a post — choosing the right image, sharpening the caption, debating whether the joke lands — you are not simply sharing information. You are doing something far more ancient and human. You are building your identity in public, one post at a time.

Every share is a declaration. Every meme is a manifesto. Every data chart you post is quietly announcing: I am the kind of person who reads data charts and finds them interesting enough to share. Which is, if you think about it, an extraordinarily specific thing to announce to the world — and yet, millions of people do it every single day, because it works. It finds the tribe. It signals the values. It says, without saying: does anyone else see the world the way I do?

The platforms understood this before most of us did. They took humanity's oldest need — to be seen and understood — and they gamified it with likes, reposts, and follower counts. They turned the dopamine loop into a product. They made belonging feel like a metric.

And we, being magnificently human, walked right in and made ourselves at home.

The Third Era: When the Internet Started Talking Back

Now we live in something genuinely new. The internet is no longer a library. It is no longer just a town square. It has become a collaborative intelligence — an environment that doesn't just store information but generates it, curates it, and increasingly responds to you in real time.

Close to 30% of the global internet population now regularly uses AI systems — tools like Gemini, Grok, Chatgpt. Claude, Copilot, etc. — to summarize documents, draft ideas, research complex topics, and think through problems out loud. The search box has evolved into a conversation. The encyclopedia has grown a personality.

This shift is more profound than it first appears. For most of internet history, the challenge was finding information. Today, information is everywhere, instantaneous, and often indistinguishable from noise. The new challenge is entirely different:

  • Maintaining your own judgment in a feed engineered to override it.
  • Choosing what to amplify rather than simply reacting to what the algorithm serves.
  • Using intelligent tools without surrendering your own intellectual sovereignty to them.

The internet started as a place where humans searched for data. It became a place where humans connected with humans. Today, it is a place where humans and intelligent systems work side by side — and the quality of that collaboration depends entirely on how consciously you show up to it.

What Has Actually Changed (And What Hasn't)

Strip away the platforms, the algorithms, the engagement metrics, and the AI, and something remarkably consistent remains underneath all of it.

People still go online for the same reasons they always did:

ThenNow
Searching AltaVista for answersAsking an AI and getting a conversation back
Posting on a forum nobody readPosting on Bluesky and watching it catch fire in a niche community
Emailing a friend a funny linkTexting a meme directly into someone's soul via WhatsApp
Reading a static news pageScrolling a personalized feed that knows you better than your dentist
Downloading a song in 45 minutesStreaming an entire discography before you've finished your coffee

The tools have transformed beyond recognition. The motivations have not moved an inch.

We still want to be informed. We still want to connect. We still want to laugh, to argue, to share something that moved us and ask: did it move you too?

The Honest Takeaway

The internet did not change human nature. It revealed it — at scale, at speed, with a comment section.

The people who use it best are not the ones chasing the algorithm or optimizing every post for maximum reach. They are the ones who show up with something genuine to say, who understand the tools well enough to use them without being used by them, and who remember that behind every screen is a person who, at some fundamental level, is just looking for a little signal in a lot of noise.

The dial-up scream is long gone. The spinning flame GIFs are mostly gone. The beige desktop computers are definitely gone.

But the reason we logged on in the first place — curiosity, connection, the irresistible human urge to say "look at this thing I found" — that part hasn't changed at all.

And honestly? That's the most hopeful thing about the whole magnificent, chaotic, occasionally maddening experiment.

The internet is 6.5 hours of your day. Make at least some of it count for something you actually chose.


Sources & References

🧠 Psychology of Sharing & Human Motivation

1. The New York Times — "The Psychology of Sharing" The landmark multiphase study conducted by The New York Times Customer Insight Group in collaboration with Latitude Research. The foundational source for why people share content online, covering identity, dopamine loops, and emotional resonance. 🔗 https://investors.nytco.com/news-and-events/press-releases/news-details/2011/The-New-York-Times-Completes-Research-on-Psychology-of-Sharing/default.aspx

2. Foundation Marketing — PDF Summary: "The Psychology of Sharing" A remixed, accessible summary of the full NYT Customer Insight Group research, breaking down the five core motivations for online sharing behavior. 🔗 https://foundationinc.co/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NYT-Psychology-Of-Sharing.pdf


⏰ Best Times to Post — Platform Data

3. Buffer — "Best Time to Post on Social Media in 2026" Buffer's comprehensive analysis of posting windows across all major platforms, based on aggregated engagement data. Covers Instagram, Facebook, X, TikTok, and more. 🔗 https://buffer.com/resources/best-time-to-post-social-media/

4. Buffer — "Best Time to Post on Instagram: 2026 Data from 9.6M Posts" A deep-dive Instagram-specific analysis from Buffer, drawing on 9.6 million posts to identify peak engagement windows by day and hour. 🔗 https://buffer.com/resources/when-is-the-best-time-to-post-on-instagram/

5. Sprout Social — "Best Times to Post on Social Media in 2026" Sprout Social's aggregated cross-platform timing guide, based on analysis of 2.5 billion engagements. Covers peak windows for Instagram, Facebook, X, LinkedIn, and more. 🔗 https://sproutsocial.com/insights/best-times-to-post-on-social-media/

6. Sprout Social — "Best Times to Post on Instagram in 2026" Instagram-specific timing data from Sprout Social, identifying midweek afternoons as the highest-engagement windows for the platform. 🔗 https://sproutsocial.com/insights/best-times-to-post-on-instagram/

7. Social Media Today — "The Best Time to Post in 2025, Based on 30K Brands" A synthesis of Sprout Social's research applied across 30,000 brand accounts, offering real-world validation of the optimal posting windows. 🔗 https://www.socialmediatoday.com/news/best-times-to-post-2025-sprout-social/744014/


🌍 Global Internet Usage & Behavior

8. DataReportalGlobal Digital Overview The primary source for global internet usage statistics, including the 6.5 hours of daily online time figure and the 5.7 billion active social media user identities cited in the article. 🔗 https://datareportal.com/global-digital-overview

9. GWI (Global Web Index) — Internet Behavior Reports GWI's ongoing consumer research tracking how people across demographics use the internet, covering social media, streaming, AI tools, e-commerce, and messaging habits. 🔗 https://www.gwi.com/reports


🤖 AI & The Evolving Web

10. Anthropic — Claude One of the primary generative AI platforms cited in the article as part of the fastest-growing sector of internet usage, alongside ChatGPT and Gemini. 🔗 https://www.anthropic.com


All links were verified as active as of May 2026. Platform engagement statistics are subject to change as algorithms and user behavior evolve — always cross-reference with your own built-in analytics for the most accurate, audience-specific data.