There is a specific type of fatigue that results from watching too much rather than from doing too much. Scrolling through headlines about missile strikes, ceasefire collapses, and troop movements while sitting in a quiet kitchen in the morning, coffee cooling on the counter, and feeling, somewhere behind the sternum, a low-grade alarm that just won’t go off. It’s not overly dramatic. It doesn’t resemble a panic attack. Sitting down and settling in is just a feeling of dread.
It is neither irrationality nor weakness that is occurring at those times. The amygdala, the brain’s threat-detection system, is as quick and blunt as a hammer, but it is unable to discriminate between a threat that appears on a screen and one that is physically present. When it receives information about conflict, escalation, and unpredictability, it reacts in the only way it can: by getting the body ready to fight or run. The heart rate is slightly elevated. The mind begins to revolve. Something that the stomach can only refer to as incorrect is registered. For a nervous system operating on antiquated code, it doesn’t really matter that the threat is thousands of miles away and is mediated through a notification badge.

The majority of people trip over this section. It’s reasonable to assume that your body will act appropriately because you’re physically safe, whether you’re lying in bed, sitting at your desk, or waiting for a bus. However, closeness is not necessary for anxiety. Uncertainty, perceived danger, and the feeling that something negative might happen and there is nothing you can do about it are all necessary. All three are repeatedly delivered in real time to a device that never leaves your hand by modern conflict news.
Clients with what is increasingly being referred to as current events anxiety exhibit a recurring pattern, according to therapists: they are not only upset about the news. Since it doesn’t directly affect them, they feel bad for being upset. The initial anxiety is compounded by that guilt. This second layer, the self-criticism about experiencing the fear at all, might be just as harmful as the headlines.
It is impossible to argue that the nervous system is not in threat mode. It’s worth pausing to consider that. It is beyond the reach of logic. Telling yourself that you’re safe statistically, that the conflict is far away, or that you’ve survived unpredictable news cycles in the past won’t stop the alarm. Physical input, such as breath, the body, and the immediate sensory environment, does make it. A physiological sigh, which is a double inhale through the nose followed by a long, slow exhale through the mouth, is advised by therapists using somatic approaches. It sounds almost too easy. Because it directly instructs the parasympathetic nervous system to relax, it still functions.
Mental health practitioners believe that the phone itself has become just as problematic as the content it contains. Repetition is how the nervous system learns. Throughout the day, check breaking news frequently, and the brain starts to view this as a necessary state of mind. The experience of safety between information intake is something the system sorely needs, and it is provided by two deliberate news sessions per day that are neither reactive nor notification-driven. Those who regularly attempt this boundary report a change within days, though it’s still unclear if most people actually think it’s possible for them.
As odd as the term may sound, a lot of this work ultimately ends up in radical acceptance. It does not imply apathy. It entails realizing that some of the current events in the world are genuinely beyond the control of any one person, and that remaining vigilant about them only limits the life of the person experiencing them rather than protecting anyone. There is a difference between being informed and being consumed. It’s worthwhile to locate the boundary between them.

