
What can the Pirahã hunter-gatherers of the Amazon rainforest teach us about the modern doomscrolling epidemic? According to Daniel Everett, the author of “Don’t Sleep, there are Snakes” they live happy lives, focused on immediate experience, with little concept of past and future. They don’t subscribe to the concept of time as a scarce resource to be managed and measured, prevalent only since the invention of mechanical clocks in the 13th century.
Everett is a Christian missionary who moves his family to Brazil and lives with the Pirahã in order to learn their language, and to convert them to Christianity.
Learning the Pirahã language proves to be difficult, with its absence of “recursive structures”. Recursion is the embedding of a clauses within a clause, for example “The man, who is fishing, is my brother.” Without recursion this would be expressed as a series of clauses: “The man is fishing. The man is my brother”. This finding was controversial and goes against Noam Chomsky’s assertion that recursion is universal.
Everett experiences the Pirahã as living in a very present-focused way. They don’t have stories of legends past, and don’t speculate about the future. Everett fails miserably at converting them to Christianity – despite his valiant efforts creating recording summary of the Gospels the Pirahã’s own language. When they find his audiotape boring (except for a graphic telling of John the Baptist’s beheading), Everett re-records the summary this time narrated by a native tribesman, however this also fails.
The Pirahã simply have no trust and little interest in information that is not directly observed. They ask Everett about Jesus:
“Did you see him?” Did your father see him?” when the answer is no, they tune out. Eventually Everett ends up abandoning his faith, the Pirahã convert him. Exposed to a well-adjusted, happy people who do not rely on the far-removed promises and laws of the Bible, he changes his world view.
What does this have to do with doomscrolling? People who scroll endlessly in search of dopamine describe losing the sense of time passing. They experience intermittent reinforcement, a type of reward frequency that makes a behavior more resistant to extinction. This is not always healthy, and it’s not my contention that it is.
Humans have for 300,000 years lived in a present-focused way, whereas the practice of dividing time into distinct units (to be used productively) is ridiculously recent. Our predisposition toward activities which return one to an instinctive sense of present may evolutionary bias. Doomscrolling provides relaxation from the mental ligatures of time-management.
Thus the appeal of doomscrolling is not just the dopamine hit from entertaining content, delivered intermittently, it’s also a larger sense of being given an ancestral reprieve from the modern tyranny of time.























The real story of 2018’s “A Star is Born” is how its stars, who play stars, are unable to do anything but imitate how someone would behave when they achieve stardom, rather than expose their own “lived” experience.