21/01/2026
Nothing spoils faster than information.
It used to be milk. Today, it’s the news.
We live in the middle of an information war — every day, every hour, every minute. Wars, crises, disasters, political drama, all in real time, straight to our phones. You can slide into a depression without ever leaving your house.
Was it different in the past?
Of course not. The world was never peaceful.
The only difference: back then, you didn’t know everything immediately.
Thanks to globalization, the internet, and social media, we now receive all information at once — unfiltered and unsolicited. Before your coffee is ready, you already know which country Trump might want to “save” or “conquer” next.
I suffer from acrophobia — the scientific term for fear of heights. It sounds harmless, but it feels like an internal system crash once I’m more than three meters above the ground.
Still, my brother and I decided to try parasailing behind a speedboat. A boat pulls a parachute, and you fly behind it.
And then something unexpected happened:
The acrophobia disappeared.
Instead of panic came an amazing feeling.
Freedom. Adrenaline. Life.
I experienced something like this for the very first time.
During the flight, I splashed into the water three times and swallowed a good amount of seawater.
Very salty.
Extremely salty.
I can now officially confirm: Pacific Ocean, Gulf of Thailand, near Phu Quoc — salt level tested.
But the most surprising part came afterward.
The longer we stayed in the air, the calmer I became.
No panic. No shaking. No acrophobia.
Just wind, open space, and an incredible sense of freedom.
So here’s the conclusion:
Less doomscrolling, more traveling.
Less toxic news, more books.
Less fear, more life.
Enjoy the moment.
Here. Now.
And preferably somewhere on the road. 🌍✈️