Aligned & Awake: I’m Not Letting an Algorithm Decide My Joy
A small rebellion against curated lives and predictive happiness
Aligned & Awake
My reflections on life through travel, human design, energy, astrology, and emotional clarity. Not as a guru. Just one person figuring it out in real time.
Algorithms are very sure of themselves.
They know what I should watch next.
What I should buy next.
Who I should apparently become next, based on something I hovered over for half a second while tired.
They are confident.
Bold, even.
Like a man explaining your own job to you. (I had to, it was there for the taking!)
Lately, I’ve been feeling the edges of that world more clearly.
The feeds that never end.
The lives that look tidy from the outside.
The quiet hum of isolation tucked neatly underneath it all, like bad wiring behind a beautiful wall.
We built systems that know our habits intimately.
They know when we’re bored.
They know when we’re vulnerable.
They know exactly when to offer us a pair of trousers we neither need nor asked for.
Somewhere along the way, curiosity got outsourced.
So I’ve been wandering off the digital path on purpose.
Nothing dramatic.
No grand announcement.
No documentary crew following me into the wilderness.
Just small disappearances.
Travelling helps.
New streets scramble the internal GPS.
Your phone doesn’t know the rhythm yet.
You do things without documenting them because you’re too busy figuring out where you are.
I know I’m fortunate to travel. I don’t take that lightly.
And I don’t think magic requires a boarding pass.
It lives closer than that.
You don’t have to go far.
You do have to step outside.
Or open a window.
Or change rooms.
Or touch something that doesn’t light up when you tap it.
There’s a quiet rebellion happening.
People are buying records again.
Digging out old CDs.
Watching films on DVDs and committing to the whole thing, adverts and all.
Libraries are busy.
Pens are back.
Handwriting has returned, looking slightly unhinged but deeply sincere.
Some people are installing landlines.
Others are hooking rotary phones to Bluetooth like it’s a side quest.
If someone starts sending me a fax, I’ll frame it.
This isn’t nostalgia.
It’s hunger.
A craving for texture.
For slowness.
For moments that don’t ask to be shared.
This year, I started pulling my attention back in stubborn little ways.
My phone no longer sleeps beside me.
It lives across the room now.
Like a device that lost my trust.
Mornings feel different.
I wake up and sit with myself.
I move my body without recording it.
I write before the world gets a vote.
I eat breakfast properly.
At a table.
On a plate.
Like someone with time and self-respect.
It feels familiar in a way that’s hard to explain.
Like remembering something I forgot I missed.
I still spend time on screens. I’m a writer. That part stays.
This is about choice.
Balance looks different for everyone.
What I keep circling back to is this:
We get to decide what predicts our joy.
That might look like walking your neighbourhood without headphones.
Talking to the person behind the counter.
Bringing something into your home that invites curiosity instead of comparison.
A book.
A plant.
A notebook you’re not trying to monetize.
This is where P.L.A.Y. slips in quietly.
Purpose.
Liberation.
Authenticity.
You.
As a way of being.
The remembering of curiosity.
The pleasure of getting slightly lost.
The freedom of not needing to optimize every moment.
Turning toward life.
Let it be a bit messy.
Letting it surprise you.
The algorithms will keep predicting.
They’re very committed to that.
I’m more interested in wandering.
In choosing.
In seeing what happens when I look up.
Sometimes I get lost.
Sometimes I find something better.
And sometimes I just eat my breakfast in peace,
at a table, with a fork, not being marketed to.
Which feels like a small miracle.
Possibly a radical act.
Definitely the best part of my morning.
Tell me…
What would your life feel like if you stopped letting an algorithm lead it?




Love it! Every evening when I walk my dog I leave the headphones off and aim to connect with my neighbors while we are out and about. It makes a huge difference.
Haha I love this. This got me haha...
I eat breakfast properly.
At a table.
On a plate.
Like someone with time and self-respect.