Standing on a balcony at 11 PM, scrolling through photos of strangers while the night air hits your face, is a modern reality. You aren’t looking for anything specific. You aren’t even enjoying the content. You are just seeking movement—any kind of digital noise to drown out the sudden, heavy silence in your mind.
For many people, this is the reality. You have the high honors, the 99th-percentile scores, and the big dreams, yet you find yourself “bed rotting” through a weekend that feels more like a horizontal marathon than a rest. From the outside, your life looks picture-perfect. You pay your bills, you go to work, and you respond to people checking in on you. But inside, everything feels flat. Gray. You aren’t “clinically” depressed; you’re functioning, but you aren’t feeling anything at all.
I used to think these were just bad habits—the constant snacking, the scrolling from commute to bed, the ghosting of friends who took too long to reply. I felt lazy, undisciplined, a case of wasted potential. But then a doctor said something that reframed everything: “Your brain is starving.”
It turns out that for a neurodivergent or high-performance brain, daily life often moves in slow motion. These brains require a much higher baseline of stimulation just to feel “normal.” When the world doesn’t provide enough “signal,” the brain stops waiting for the “gourmet meal” of deep work or real connection and starts grabbing for the “fast food” of stimulation.
This is the reality of the dopamine gap. The scroll offers zero effort and infinite novelty; the snack offers an instant reward; the “bed rotting” is a symptom of a brain that thinks a meaningful project requires too much effort for a reward that’s too far away. These aren’t character flaws; they are symptoms. It’s a high-revving engine idling in a parking lot, desperately searching for a road fast enough to handle its speed.
Understanding this mechanic changes the narrative. But the question remains: when will it ever stop feeling like this? Maybe it takes time, maybe it takes movement, maybe a conversation, anything which disrupts and shocks nervous system, maybe it just takes the courage to keep going. Maybe the feeling never fully disappears, or maybe it shifts tomorrow. At this point, all there is left to do is hope.
Hope 🙂