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You were meant to matter in your neighborhood. Now you're trying to matter to the entire world. No wonder you feel lost, stuck, and unmotivated. You're competing in a game your brain was never built to play.

For most of human history, your world was 150 people. You knew them. They knew you. Status was local and stable. You had a role: a place where you mattered. Your brain evolved to navigate that world. Not this one.

Anthropologist Robin Dunbar found that once tibres hit 150 people, discontent took over and the once civil society split apart. In a small local community, it’s easy to understand who you are, what your roles are, and where you belong. As a tribe grows, we lose the cohesion that held society together. We don’t quite know where we stand or whose in our in-group. We transition towards an anonymous society.

Now, we have an anonymous society on steroids. You wake up and immediately compare yourself to millions. The most successful people on the planet are in your pocket....or at least folks who claim to be. Their highlight reels and achievement are curated perfection. Your ancient brain doesn't know it's a trick. It just registers: you're losing and alone...

Social media turned a local status game into a global one. And in a global game, you're always behind. It's just math. There's always someone more successful, more attractive, more followed. The comparison never ends and your brain gets the idea that you are at the bottom of the totem pole.

It's why "winning" online feels so empty. You post something. It does well. The dopamine hits. And then... nothing. The feeling fades almost instantly, and you're hungry again. You're chasing status in a system designed to never let you feel like you have enough.

Meanwhile, the things that actually fulfill us haven't changed. Deep relationships. Meaningful work. Contributing to something beyond yourself. Being known—really known—by people who matter to you. The antidote is right there, but it's analog.

Your brain doesn't need millions of people to think you're important. It needs a few dozen who actually know you. Who you've helped. Who've helped you. At the end of the day, we want to matter, to care, and to be cared for. That's the scorecard evolution wrote.

And we keep trying to fill it with the superficial fluff version of belonging, mastery, and meaning. You optimize for reach instead of depth. For followers instead of friends. For metrics that don't matter to a brain that's keeping a very different score. The world that is too big for our minds to handle. We live in a time where every single day we have reminders that we aren’t good enough.

You weren't meant to matter to everyone. You were meant to matter to someone. To a small group and a place you could call home. It's time to return to the game you were actually built to win. Go local. Go analog. Find your people. Do good work. Find meaning in real life.