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Description

Most people assume their anxiety comes from demanding lives, busy schedules, or too much responsibility. In this episode of The Rebuild, Dillon breaks down why that explanation is often incomplete. The real issue is not pressure itself, but a nervous system that’s constantly fragmented by screens, notifications, and nonstop input.

This conversation reframes anxiety as a capacity problem, not a character flaw. When attention is constantly pulled in different directions, the brain never fully processes emotion, never settles, and never recovers. What feels like overwhelm is often overstimulation masquerading as stress.

Dillon explains how modern screen habits quietly keep people stuck in a low-grade fight-or-flight state, why clarity actually increases when input decreases, and why reducing screen time often improves anxiety before anything else in life changes.

🧠 What You’ll Learn:
• How screen time fragments attention and raises baseline anxiety
• Why most apps are built on variable reward loops that keep the nervous system activated
• The hidden cost of constant context switching and decision fatigue
• Why more information rarely creates more clarity
• How silence feels uncomfortable when the brain is conditioned to stimulation
• Why anxiety often improves simply by reducing input, not adding solutions

✅ Apply This Right Now:
• Audit your daily screen time honestly, not just your workouts and nutrition
• Aim for under 2 hours of recreational scrolling per day as a starting target
• Notice how your anxiety shifts before changing anything else in your routine
• Build intentional pockets of low-stimulation time where your nervous system can settle
• Stop trying to out-supplement or out-train nervous system overload

🔁 Identity Close:
Reducing screen time doesn’t remove stress from your life. It restores the capacity to handle it. Calm isn’t laziness. It’s neurological readiness.