Sometimes the digital world feels like a river you can’t stop—algorithms, ads, trending topics all rushing you along whether you want to go or not. In a recent piece on Protopage, I found a refreshingly simple way to step out of the current and start curating my own flow.
It’s a dashboard, pure and simple. No pop-ups, no pushy “for you” feeds—just a clear space to collect what actually matters to you. It reminded me of the yogic practice of svadhyaya: self-study and intentional selection, rather than passive consumption.
🧭 Discernment in the Digital Age
When every click and scroll is engineered for engagement, it’s easy to lose touch with your own genuine interests. Apps like Protopage invite us to become discerning about what we take in: to notice which sites, stories, or sources nourish us, and which just fill up space. This is digital tapas—sustained effort to choose thoughtfully, rather than surrender to distraction.
Making your own feed isn’t anti-technology; it’s a form of agency. It’s a reminder that contentment (santosha) doesn’t come from more, but from enough—the right mix of news, ideas, and inspiration, chosen by you.
📚 Practices for a Curated Mind
How do we use these tools? Try making a start page for just a week, adding only the links and feeds you truly value. Notice how your mental “feed” shifts. Are you less frazzled, more connected, or even a little bored? (Boredom can be a teacher, too—sometimes it points the way to deeper curiosity or rest.)
Think of this practice as modern svadhyaya. What are you really hungry for online? What habits need pruning? When we step back from algorithm-driven “discovery,” we begin to rediscover ourselves—our questions, our joy, our way of seeing.
🌱 Small Changes, Expanding Awareness
There’s no one right way to build your digital home, but maybe that’s the point. Like yoga, the value is in the practice—the act of returning, again and again, to what matters most. A dashboard like Protopage is just a tool; the real work is the gentle discipline of tending your attention.
After all, what we choose to notice becomes our worldview, one click at a time. What might shift if your start page reflected your true interests—no ads, no noise, just clarity?
— MJH

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