Is social media stealing your joy? Discover the science-backed tips to reclaim it. A 2018 study revealed that more than 30 minutes of daily social media usage can increase feelings of loneliness and depression. Research also shows that smartphone app notifications can contribute to a lack of focus. But here's where it gets controversial: while social media can drain our joy, it's not the only culprit. The digital nature of our daily lives, including passive use of social media and notifications, can quietly undermine our capacity for joy. A 2015 study found that passive use of Facebook, or 'doomscrolling', led to a decline in overall well-being. However, there are science-backed strategies to mitigate these effects. Over the centuries, human survival in nature depended on neurological systems to detect danger from predators and natural threats. While most of us don't have to protect ourselves from apex predators daily, these systems still exist within us. When discomfort arises, our primal brains activate, and we often label that discomfort as evidence of a perceived threat. This is where self-care practices beat out purchases. A 2015 study found that practicing self-compassion is more than just a mood boost; it is a regulation system that rewires our brain's meaning-making circuits. Remember, our brains don't always tell us the truth, especially when they are looking to re-up on their dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, endorphins, or other neurochemicals. Understanding how our joy is quietly stolen is how we learn to protect it. Keep hunting!