Newsgather
Back|How I quit doomscrolling and rediscovered my love of comic books
How I quit doomscrolling and rediscovered my love of comic books
ACTUAI
Guardian Tech·27.04.2026·🇬🇧United Kingdom·Opinion

How I quit doomscrolling and rediscovered my love of comic books

After a decade of late-night phone addiction, swapping screens for comics improved my sleep, creativity and mental health

4 dk okuma·%30 önem·892 kelime
#doomscrolling#comicbooks#mentalhealth#self-care#digitalwellness#sleepimprovement#addiction#screentime
G
Guardian Tech
Yayıncı
Taille de police

After a long day of looking at screens for work, I used to go to bed and stare at my phone until I fell asleep. When not doomscrolling news headlines, I'd crash out to hateful comments on social media or revisit workplace dramas via mobile versions of Teams and Slack. I was always plugged in. It was a ritual that would start well before bedtime. As the evening wound down, I'd surf algorithms for hours on end, barely paying attention to whatever television programme was on in the background, only half-listening to conversations around me. Whether it was the incessantly dystopian news cycle, toxic opinions on pop culture, or posts railing against obtuse LinkedIn speak, there was always another online scab to pick. When sleep did arrive, it would be restless and anxiety-ridden. With my brain swimming with fears of various apocalypses and the vitriol of online agitators, it's no wonder my dreams were full of the same. After one feverish night too many, I realised that I had to make a change. In a quest to shrug off my phone's insidious hold, I began to search for something that would better occupy my attention. Books seemed like the natural solution, and I quickly turned to comics. I'd been a voracious comic book reader as a youth, growing up in the early 1990s on a diet of the Beano and Dandy, before graduating to The Adventures of Tintin and Asterix. From there, I moved on to my father's 2000 AD collection – which, to a young teenager, held a rather illicit thrill due to its intensely violent strips. I then devoured anything I could get my hands on. Preacher, The Sandman, Watchmen, Batman – I'd read the lot. But as an adult in my 30s, I wasn't the devout reader I once had been. That changed in late 2024, when I finally decided to ditch doomscrolling. Spurred on by the online furores that surrounded the imminent second term of Donald Trump, I realised that I needed to preserve my mental health and make new routines before I became entirely consumed with fear and anger. And who knows more about self-care than your inner child? Instead of reaching for my phone in the evenings, I picked up a comic instead. Reading them as an adult restored a sense of childlike wonder that transcended my anxieties. I found my quality of sleep started to improve. My dreams were more fanciful and less marked by the banal terrors of day-to-day life. I began to wake up feeling revitalised, free of the residual negativity from the previous night's miserable doomscrolling. Inspired by the colourful imagery and ideas I found in comic books, I was able to channel a newfound sense of creativity into my own work as a journalist. I also felt less of an urge to check in on work channels after I left the office, as this had become valuable comic book time. I hadn't realised how my attention span had suffered due to a decade of switching from app to app at the blink of an eye. This soon got better – a result of taking the time and effort to read a lengthy comic series or graphic novel to the end. It also came with a sense of accomplishment, rather than the self-loathing I usually felt when I'd just spent the last hour on Reddit. As someone whose mind tends to spiral when left to its own self-sabotaging devices, comic books offered a form of escapism that allowed my mind to tackle fears of the apocalypse, dictators and an AI uprising in a safe environment. Dystopian sci-fi and extreme horror comics may not seem like cosy bedtime reading, but they felt like a healthier outlet compared with the unhelpful fearmongering of online commenters. Rediscovering my love for comic books isn't about burying my head in the sand by cowering in imaginary universes. It's carving out some time for self-care in a world that's become increasingly demanding of our headspace. Leaving behind my evenings glued to my phone has boosted my mood, my creativity and general outlook on life. I let my inner child back out and haven't looked back since.

This article was originally published by Guardian Tech.

Related Stories

Britain's Falling Healthy Life Expectancy Is a National Scandal
ACTUAI
opinion

Britain's Falling Healthy Life Expectancy Is a National Scandal

Analysis from the Health Foundation reveals a devastating two-year decline in healthy life expectancy in Britain, with the UK now ranking 20th out of 21 high-income countries, just above the US. Worsening mental health among younger adults shows the sharpest deterioration, while the pandemic is not to blame. By 2028, when retirement age rises to 67, the average person will be in poor health over six years before stopping work. Huge geographical disparities exist, with London improving while Blackpool and Hartlepool see steepest declines.

Négatif
03.05.2026
Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances
ACTUAI
opinion

Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances

Princeton professor Tom Griffiths argues that human intelligence will remain special despite AI advances because our cognitive abilities evolved in response to specific biological constraints – finite lifespans, limited brain capacity, and communication through speech. While AI systems can process more data and scale their capabilities, they lack the breadth of human experience and struggle with tasks humans find simple. Griffiths contends that intelligence isn't a single scale like height, but rather encompasses many different ways of being smart, and AI will ultimately be better at some things and worse at others rather than universally superhuman.

Neutre
03.05.2026
The price of exposure: how Britain's dependence creates vulnerability
ACTUAI
opinion

The price of exposure: how Britain's dependence creates vulnerability

The Bank of England's warning that food inflation could reach 7% exposes Britain's systemic vulnerability to geopolitical shocks. An analysis argues that UK key sectors run on thin margins with no resilience reserves, while digital infrastructure and energy dependence on the Strait of Hormuz create critical exposure. Former Trump official Fiona Hill warned the UK homeland is 'back on the pitch' as Russia conducts sabotage and cyber-attacks, urging a political narrative linking security to everyday life that British politics currently lacks.

Négatif
01.05.2026
The case for an AI slop tax
ACTUAI
opinion

The case for an AI slop tax

With 57% of voters believing AI risks outweigh benefits and 74% thinking government isn't doing enough to regulate it, the political moment for AI legislation is ripe. The author argues for a 1% "slop tax" on AI companies to combat the flood of low-quality AI-generated content that threatens human creativity and cultural institutions. The revenue would fund grants for artists, researchers, and cultural institutions—the very groups whose work trained these AI models.

Négatif
30.04.2026
The unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić
ACTUAI
opinion

The unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić

This opinion piece examines how the toxic masculinity ideologies of the manosphere have infiltrated sports culture, using Luka Dončić as a primary example. The article argues that NBA players, like Dončić, are now subjected to the same impossible body standards that have long plagued female athletes. Despite Dončić's Hall of Fame-level talent and championship success, media and fans obsess over his conditioning and weight rather than his court performance. The piece connects this to a broader societal shift where worth is seen as conditional—something that must be earned through visible performance—leaving even elite athletes unable to meet unrealistic standards.

Négatif
29.04.2026