Technological Evolution but Human Stagnation

I just finished writing my daily post, and—slight spoiler—it’s about an NES game I loved when I was younger.
Looking back on it, and even though I already know this, we really live in a crazy era, with mind-blowing technology compared to just two or three decades ago.

Even if, for some things, I like to say it was better before, like Francis Cabrel, we can’t deny that technological progress has improved our daily lives.

But once again, it’s not all black or white, and having some improvements doesn’t mean we should ignore the collateral damage under the pretext of a slightly better world.

Going back to the game, it was extremely difficult. Back then, there was no ChatGPT or even the Internet to help you find the solution to a tough boss or a maze. You wanted to progress? Well, you took notes, lost, and started over. Sometimes from the very beginning of the game!
I haven’t yet tried the new game series that brings back this feeling, but when we think about our brain, it’s precisely this frustration that allows us to learn and improve. When the solution is just two copy-paste clicks away in ChatGPT, our brain isn’t being used.

We need friction for learning to take place. And with daily life becoming easier and more convenient, that friction is becoming increasingly rare.
We have to seek friction ourselves, and maybe the developers of recent difficult games—whose names escape me—have understood this, even if they haven’t necessarily linked it to our brain.

Modern neurobiology research actually started in the 19th century!
Some scholars already suspected that the brain was involved, but until quite recently, science believed that emotions were primarily centered in the heart.
I think this conclusion came from the fact that it’s extremely easy to perceive our heartbeat. We may never actually see our own heart, but we can feel it, hear it, and recognize when we’re moved because it starts racing. We can also use our breathing to calm down and lower our heart rate.

For example, yoga has long used breathing techniques because people understood, even back then, that breath could influence internal processes. They didn’t know the exact mechanisms, such as how an increased heart rate triggers neurotransmitter production.

But the connection was still made.

In just three decades, looking at video games alone, we’ve gone from the NES to the upcoming Switch 2 or PS6.
But when it comes to self-knowledge, most of us remain completely ignorant of how we function. Everything seems like magic or beyond our control.

Our brain—or more broadly, our nervous system, since our gut also plays a role in our well-being—remains a mystery. But recent studies are helping us understand its significance for our social life, mental well-being, and much more.

Some medical approaches that recommend meditation are dismissed as quackery—”That’s not real medicine.”
But taking medication, whose side effects are often poorly understood? That’s real medicine.

We now know that meditation has countless benefits for our brain and mental health.

It will take time for mentalities to change. And it will be especially difficult for those who genuinely believe they’re doing things the right way.

I once wrote a post about Dixon from Alias. I remember being deeply moved by the episode where he realizes he had been unknowingly working against all the values he held dear.

I am also convinced that there are many people like Dixon. And they will be essential to a global movement—one that considers both our planet and our own well-being.

Under the pretext of freedom, our societies deliberately create products that make us sick.
And the irony is that these are the companies generating the most profit. But perhaps it’s not irony—perhaps it’s simply the way society has evolved.

And by remaining passive, we are accepting it.

I no longer want to accept it—I’ve done that for long enough.
Accepting it has caused unnecessary suffering, even for my own parents.

We can’t go back to the past, but we can act in the present.

One Daily Tale is my way of taking action.


Our latest tales

  • Into Uncharted Territory

    Into Uncharted Territory

    In ancient times, on the planet that would later be known as Esperia, the Espers lived in five separate lands, knowing nothing of one another’s existence. Their development was shaped by the qualities of the food found in their lands and by the resources available to them. This led them to awaken their own magical

    Read more

  • Four Seas Family

    Four Seas Family

    Once again, Guruko and Simba, her platypus friend, were looking through a mysterious magical device that allowed them to glimpse other dimensions. They had been watching, for a while, the dimension where we human beings live; they were intrigued by how we might eventually develop. One thing that resonated a little with them was how

    Read more

  • Devotion to the world

    Devotion to the world

    Faya, the Shape of Willpower, had one of the most difficult tasks to attend to. But as the Element of Fire, the strongest in terms of pure power, it was natural that this task was assigned to her. The Seven Shapes had understood that, for Esperia to grow peacefully, it was necessary for every Esper

    Read more

  • An Eternal Pursuit for Youth

    An Eternal Pursuit for Youth

    The Element of Lightning wasn’t the only Element with Espers like Yakara, unwilling to comply with the principles of One Daily Tale. From the Element of Earth, a powerful Esper devoted all his time, energy, and magic to trying to remain eternally young. He was called Fujimi, and he couldn’t accept the fact that living

    Read more

  • Free and open-minded

    Free and open-minded

    The Espers of the Element of Lightning were well known for their free and open-minded nature. Eklea, the Shape of Awareness and Great Element of Lightning, was the most representative among them. Espers who did not know much about her might believe she possessed a special gift, but those who truly knew her understood that

    Read more

  • Compassionate and Generous

    Compassionate and Generous

    Guruko and her platypus friend Simba were reading a part of One Daily Tale about compassion. It was titled “About Being Compassionate and Generous” and was written by Gurumin, the Shape of Empathy, with the help of the other Shapes, as always.Among the Seven Shapes, Guruko especially admired Gurumin, and she truly considered her to

    Read more

  • Right and Wrong

    Right and Wrong

    Trying to build a society where everyone can be happy is far from easy. Esperia, though striving to be peaceful, still had a lot of work ahead. But one thing remained clear to the Seven Shapes: if a consensus could be found about what is right and wrong, things would go more smoothly. One Daily

    Read more

  • Living peacefully with nature

    Living peacefully with nature

    One thing that would surprise any human being who took a look at Esperia is how the Espers have successfully created a society that lives peacefully with nature. For us, Esperia would be seen as a symbol of the wisdom of living in harmony with the rhythms of nature, far from the stresses of modern

    Read more