follow thought leaders

your social media feed is a reflection of your priorities. look at it right now. is it full of people who challenge your thinking, or is it full of people who confirm your existing beliefs and entertain your worst impulses?
the feed is the curriculum
every scroll is a micro-education. the algorithm serves you more of what you engage with, which means your feed is a feedback loop. follow garbage, get garbage. follow people who think deeply about problems you care about, and your entire information diet shifts.
this isn't about becoming a pretentious intellectual who only follows philosophers. it's about being intentional with the single most powerful input stream in your life.
who to follow and why
find people who:
- disagree with each other — if everyone in your feed has the same opinions, you're in an echo chamber, not a classroom
- show their work — not just conclusions, but how they got there. the reasoning matters more than the take
- admit when they're wrong — this is the rarest and most valuable trait in any public thinker
- make you uncomfortable — not offended, but genuinely challenged. there's a difference
start with people working on problems you care about. economics, psychology, technology, philosophy, health — whatever pulls you. follow five new people today who make you think harder than your current feed does.
the curation habit
unfollow anyone who makes you feel worse after consuming their content. mute anyone who only posts outrage bait. the goal isn't fewer accounts — it's better accounts. treat your follow list like a library, not a popularity contest.
use the tool as it was intended
social media can be the greatest learning platform ever created or the greatest waste of time ever invented. the difference is entirely in how you curate it. your feed, your choice.
if this resonated, share it with someone who needs to hear it.