The Scroll: How Our Thumbs Became Our New Escape Hatch
(The Hungry Habits Chronicles, Part 1)
It usually starts like this:
A pause between tasks.
A moment of boredom.
A spike of stress.
A sudden loneliness.
Without thinking, your hand reaches for it.
You didn’t plan to.
It’s just… there. Waiting.
And then, there you are—thumb to screen, lost in the scroll.
News. Reels. Emails. Likes. Rage. Products. Puppies. Recipes.
Seconds become minutes. Minutes become a trance.
Until something breaks the spell—a ping, a cry, your own heavy sigh.
You put the phone down.
And feel... nothing.
Or maybe just that low-grade ache that says, I didn’t want to do that again.
What If You’re Not Addicted to the Scroll… But to the Soothing?
In In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts, Dr. Gabor Maté describes a realm in Buddhist mythology where beings wander with insatiable hunger, bloated bellies, and mouths too small to ever be filled.
They are never satisfied.
They are never still.
They are always reaching for something—anything—to make the pain stop.
That’s what addiction is, he says. Not a moral failing. Not a character flaw. Not weakness.
A response to pain.
A learned escape.
A habit of numbing.
And here’s the hard truth: we all have our hungry ghosts.
The Scroll Is a Symptom, Not the Root
The compulsion to scroll isn’t just about distraction. It’s about relief.
The scroll when you're overwhelmed? Feels like control.
The scroll when you feel alone? Feels like connection.
The scroll when you’re tired? Feels like “doing something” without effort.
But after the scroll, what’s still there?
The overwhelm.
The emptiness.
The exhaustion.
Still waiting.
Because the scroll wasn’t what we needed. It was just what we reached for.
If Your Habits Could Speak, What Would They Say?
Maybe your habit isn’t scrolling.
Maybe it’s food.
Shopping.
Tidying.
Overworking.
Overthinking.
Or rescuing others.
Or avoiding inboxes.
Or Googling symptoms at 2am.
Or rewriting the to-do list—again.
We don’t just repeat these behaviors out of weakness.
We repeat them because at some point, they worked.
They gave us a taste of relief.
They soothed.
They protected.
So we go back.
Over and over.
Not because we’re broken.
Because we’re hurting.
You’re Not Broken. You’re Numbing Pain.
This is the most compassionate reframe I can offer you.
You don’t need more shame.
You don’t need more willpower.
You don’t need another app to limit screen time.
You need a way to meet the pain underneath.
To pause.
To listen.
To ask: What am I actually needing right now?
Connection? Rest? Comfort? Peace?
Not a screen. Not a cookie. Not another loop of tasks.
Something real.
Something that heals.
Try This: A 3-Minute Hungry Habit Check-In
Next time your thumb reaches for the phone—or your hand reaches for the pantry—try this:
Pause. Just for 30 seconds.
Feel. What’s happening in your body? What emotion is here?
Ask. What am I really needing right now?
Offer. A gentler habit: a stretch, a sip of water, a walk outside, a moment of stillness.
This isn’t about perfection.
It’s about interrupting automaticity.
It’s about listening instead of escaping.
And slowly, it’s about transforming habits that hurt into habits that heal.
Want to Go Deeper?
This is just the beginning of The Hungry Habits Chronicles—a series I’m writing to explore the habits we don’t talk about, the ones we use to soothe invisible pain.
Inside The Habit Healers Mindset’s Inner Circle, we go deeper every single week—guiding you through the real science and daily practice of healing habits.
If you’re ready to:
Understand your compulsions without judgment,
Build habits that soothe without sabotage, and
Rewrite the emotional loops that keep you stuck...
I invite you to join us.
Become a paid subscriber here.
Your healing doesn’t start when you finally “fix” the habit.
It starts the moment you pause—and get curious.
Great article. It reads like poetry. This scrolling problem comes with cell phones, right? I am so glad I never got that condition. Does anyone here other than me remember when pay phones were the big thing, and before your flight or as soon as you landed, you got in line for a pay phone, for your call to the office, your client, or the limo picking you up?
I am not an expert, but biggest take away I got from reading a book on feng shui was that electric devices emit energy and we are attracted to energy. They call to us. Think TV, radio, computers, and phones