Tag: self-care

  • The Battle of Screens vs Books: A Deep Dive

    The Battle of Screens vs Books: A Deep Dive

    The bookshops are empty and dusty, but the cinemas and comedy halls are overflowing. The books are closed, but the screens are beaming. The eyes are wide open, but the brain is gradually falling into a slumber. Reason has been imprisoned, but emotions are on rampage. The world is going through a rapid evolution of sorts.  It has become one big eyeball without brains. It only sees but cannot understand. It only feels but cannot ground the signal in reason. This is the tragedy of an age that lives on the screen – television screen, computer screen, mobile phone screen.

    The mobile technology has definitely caused a paradigm shift which has metamorphosed into a pandemic shift. We grew up reading books. This generation is growing up dreaming and drooling over screens. Even adults now clutch onto mobile devices with the tenacity of an infant guarding her plastic toys. People now generally spend a disproportionate amount of their day watching video. They would rather watch a thousand videos than read a chapter of a book. In an age ruled by screens, where most knowledge is delivered through short videos, visual slides, and voice notes, we’re beginning to treat reading like an optional luxury. And yet, something deep within me resists this shift — not from nostalgia, but from a growing conviction. It’s not just a stylistic preference. It’s a neurological, psychological, and even moral concern. It transcends the periphery of theory into the sacred realms of science, experience and observation.

    1. The Brain on Books vs. Screens

    Let’s begin with the brain. Reading is not a passive activity — it’s an active, energy-consuming process involving multiple complex regions of the brain. Reading engages several parts of the brain that facilitate critical thinking while watching of videos adulterates the learning process by subtly  stimulating the emotional region of the brain – the amygdala. Studies using fMRI confirm that reading — especially deep reading — is mentally taxing and builds cognitive stamina, focus, and abstract reasoning. On the contrary, the sights and sounds built into videos facilitate quicker absorption of information by the brain with minimal efforts. They engage more of the limbic areas (emotion) but less of the frontal lobes (reasoning) thus lowering internal visualization, analysis and synthesis of information.

    ActivityKey Brain Regions ActivatedCognitive Outcome
    ReadingVisual Word Form Area (VWFA), Broca’s area, Wernicke’s area, Prefrontal Cortex, Angular GyrusDeep comprehension, memory integration, critical reasoning
    Watching VideoOccipital Cortex, Auditory Cortex, Amygdala, Default Mode NetworkPassive absorption, emotion-based reaction, reduced analytical effort
    Parts of the brain activated during reading or watching videos
    Reading facilitates overall personal development

    Research using fMRI scans shows that children who read more have stronger connectivity between the VWFA and the brain’s language and executive function areas. In contrast, excessive screen time is correlated with weakened white matter in those same regions — especially those tied to language and self-regulation. The motive here is not to totally write off watching of movies for entertainment or educational purposes. I believe that videos are a powerful learning aid when used to augment but not substitute reading. The catch however, is that inordinate use of visual media cultivates mental passivity. It short-circuits the brain’s deep-learning circuits, weakens cognitive stamina, and replaces reflection with reflex. Visual aids essentially mimic a feeding bottle or spoon-feeding syndrome where partly digested food is feed directly into the intestine of an infant without engaging the tongue and teeth. Videos and visual aids impair deep and long-term learning by reducing cognitive ability, decreasing attention span, weakening of imagination and internal visualization in addition to reducing shallow processing. What we gain in speed, we often lose in substance.

    Reading builds the mental scaffolding for structured thought. Watching lets that scaffolding sit unused.

    2. The Passivity of Watching: Recline and Decline

    Have you noticed that people often watch videos lying down? Reclining on a couch or bed, mentally drifting, barely blinking? That’s not a coincidence. When the body reclines, the brain receives a clear signal: ‘It’s time to rest.’ The posture we choose becomes the posture of our mind. Sit up, and we signal readiness. Recline, and we invite passivity. That’s why real learning rarely happens when we’re lying down. But unfortunately, entertainment and educational visual media naturally invite us to “relax and enjoy” or “learn with fun”. Both messages send signals to the brain to slow down mental activity.

    Watching encourages passivity. Videos present pre-processed imagery, tone, pace, and even emotion. There is little left for the viewer to construct or wrestle with. Studies have shown that students who frequently consume visual media score low on reading comprehension and delayed recall. It has also been reported that heavy screen viewers manifest reduced working memory activation.

    Reading is the opposite. You sit up. You process. You imagine. You ask questions. It challenges your imagination and you challenge the validity of the information. Your intellect wrestles to construct a full picture of the message in the text. A man watching a video has little control over the rate at which information is being transmitted. He may hit the pause or replay button but we all know how inconveniencing that can be. On the other hand, a book is under the full control of the reader, thus giving them the leverage to pause, think deeply and reflect before continuing. What does the book do? It simply sits on the table waiting for the reader to continue or turn the next page. This is the level of engagement that makes knowledge to permeate and consolidate in the mind. It is usually in the pauses that inspiration is birthed. Ever heard of the saying “reading maketh a full man?” This concept in rooted in Indian tradition which believes that reading builds character and intellect. The same cannot be said of overindulgence in watching videos. If anything, it can be said that watching videos reduces men to babies.

    TraitReadingVideo Watching
    Mental EffortHighLow to moderate
    Depth of ProcessingDeepOften shallow
    RetentionLong-termShorter-term
    Emotional InfluenceControlled by readerOften manipulated by pacing & music
    Builds Discipline?YesRarely
    Quality of learning obtained by reading and watching videos

    The more we replace reading with watching, the more we risk training a generation of minds that can consume but not construct; react but not reflect; receive but not realize; absorb but not assimilate.

    3. Moral and Social Dimensions

    The repercussion of over-dependence on visual media and its gradual displacement of reading culture also extends to the social and moral domains. Reading cultivates a climate of inner stillness. It invites quiet, contemplation and judgment. Even in a room full of readers, you find a sacred hush — the outward sign of inward thought. In contrast, video-watching thrives amid chaos. A room of a hundred people watching separate screens feels louder, more fragmented, mentally unsettling and more emotionally volatile. A generation raised on reading tends to be reflective. A generation raised on flashing videos risks becoming restless, impulsive, and shaped more by image than by insight. Readers pause. They weigh. They apply reason and moral reflection to what they receive. Even when they are persuaded, the process is deliberate and often transformative.

    Video, however, often bypasses that mental discipline. Its pace, music, and visuals stir emotion before reason has had its say. Even when you don’t agree with the narrative being pushed in a video, it still leaves its footprints on your subconscious mind, thus subtly influencing or weakening your convictions and slowly softening convictions or reshaping them in ways we don’t detect or would have consciously permitted. For example, most African traditional values have been eroded as a result of uncensored exposure to decadent western lifestyle propagated through movies.

    A sharp contrast between how reading and watching videos affect morals and behaviours can be drawn using crime novels and crime movies. There is some evidence that violent visual media (like crime movies or TV) may increase aggressive behaviour or desensitization to violence, especially in vulnerable individuals. However, reading crime novels does not show the same effect — in fact, it often engages empathy, moral reasoning, and reflection. While both video and written content can influence thought, overwhelmingly visual media (films, games, and online videos) have been directly linked to violent criminal behaviour. The emotional immediacy and immersive nature of videos make them more likely to incite impulsive action, especially in unstable individuals. Reading, by contrast, tends to encourage reflection, delay, and distance — even when the material is dark or violent.

    Video scenes tend to partially hijack the viewer’s mind to the extent that they sometimes begin to mentally participate in the acts being relayed. This is because the brain mirrors the action being watched especially in highly emotional or immersive situations. For instance, watching a football match involving your favourite club and reading a novel about the same game do not produce the same effect. The video version will engage your emotions more and can even induce a fever in you if your club loses. This exactly why some football fans do weird things while watching a game they are vested in. Common reactions include:

    • Flinching when their team almost concedes
    • Shouting “Shooooot!” and thrusting their legs forward
    • Jerking their heads as if dodging a ball
    • Even falling off chairs during penalty shootouts!

    I am not a football fan, but I once watched a football match involving my country. My body temperature rose by several degrees during that episode, yet I could not stop watching. A book wouldn’t have caused me such trauma.

    BehaviorCrime MoviesCrime Novels
    📈 Increased aggressionLinked in multiple studies, especially in youths, impulsive individuals, or frequent viewersNo strong evidence of aggression increase
    📉 Empathy erosionPossible with repeated exposure to violent visualsRare; often enhances moral sensitivity
    🔄 Mimicry of crimeDocumented cases exist (e.g., “copycat crimes” tied to films or series)Extremely rare from reading novels
    📚 Cognitive stimulationLow-moderate, mostly sensoryHigh: visualization, inference, judgment
    Contrast between crime novels and crime movies

    What enters the soul unfiltered eventually becomes part of the soul. And the unfiltered flood of images that defines our era may be forming not just our thoughts — but our character

    4. Neuroscience of Atrophy: Empirical Evidence

    Only very few people understand the long-term damage inordinate watching of videos inflicts on people. On the other hand, almost everyone agrees, even without knowing why, that reading builds intellectual stamina, stimulates critical thinking and generates inspiration. Early exposure to books has been found to correlate with stronger brain connectivity, better school readiness, and higher long-term cognitive scores. There are parents who sedate their children with a high dose of videos until they become addicted to virtual alternatives. A good reading habit is an art of discipline that is gradually fading away, thus producing a generation that can hardly grasp complex issues let alone resolve them. Reading requires patience, persistence and focus. A book might take weeks to read, but it can be watched in two hours when condensed into a movie. One is like planting a tree which takes years to mature. But when it does, it is entrenched in the ground like a colossus. The other is like the emergence of the butterfly from the chrysalis – dazzling for a moment and then fading into oblivion. You may think of watching videos as sustaining a person on semi-digested liquid food and reading as serving someone a solid balanced diet.

    Effect of reading and video watching on the mind

    So how exactly does watching videos affect the brain? The following scientific evidence should immediately convince any doubting Thomas of the superiority of reading to watching videos.

    • A study published in JAMA Pediatrics showed that children exposed to more screen time had thinner cortexes in areas responsible for language and executive function.
    • Another found that screen-heavy children had reduced white matter integrity in regions tied to reading and self-regulation.
    • A 2020 study reported in Health.com found that adults who read regularly had better memory, cognitive flexibility, and even lived longer.
    • EEG studies (electroencephalograms) show that during passive video watching, especially television, the brain produces more alpha waves — the same waves associated with relaxed, unfocused, or even drowsy states.
    • Watching videos (especially YouTube, TikTok, or autoplay series) causes frequent dopamine surges. Over time, this leads to diminished reward sensitivity, less motivation for tasks that require effort (like reading or deep work) and a “lazy” cognitive state, even while the viewer feels entertained.

    These aren’t minor differences. They’re structural. They literally reshape the brain.

    FunctionEnhanced by ReadingImpaired by Excessive Watching
    Verbal Reasoning✅ Yes❌ Weakened
    Abstract Thinking✅ Yes❌ Blunted
    Focus and Attention Span✅ Improved❌ Reduced
    Imagination and Simulation✅ Engaged❌ Outsourced to visuals
    Emotional Regulation✅ Strengthened❌ Dysregulated by hyperstimulation
    mapping of mental capacity development to reading versus watching videos

    Watching may inform. But reading transforms.

    5. Final Reflection: Why This Matters

    There is no doubt that videos can support learning, especially when well-designed, but they do not replace the deep neural engagement required for mastery, critical reasoning, or long-term transformation. A society becomes shallow, reactionary, emotionally volatile, and less equipped to handle ambiguity. Reading is not just another format. It’s a workout for the mind. It’s a test of character. That’s why books still form the backbone of education, research, and even spiritual development. Should video triumph over reading, we risk raising generations of screen-fed zombies — hollowed minds, dulled hearts


    Reading is not just a habit; it is a virtue! It is not just a culture; it is curative! If we lose it, we don’t just become passive consumers. We become intellectually disarmed citizens of the Animal Farm!

    Start reading again from today, and you will start living fully again!

    Bibliography

    1. Bavishi, A., Slade, M. D., & Levy, B. R. (2016).
    A chapter a day: Association of book reading with longevity. Social Science & Medicine, 164, 44–48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.07.014

    2. Cao, Z., Wang, Y., Liu, X., & Zhang, Q. (2024).
    People with short-video addiction show altered brain responses during decision-making: An fMRI study. NeuroImage: Clinical, 41, 103312. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2024.103312

    3. Cheng, T. L., et al. (2019).
    Association between screen media use and brain structure in children. JAMA Pediatrics, 173(9), 852–859. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.1759

    4. Hutton, J. S., et al. (2015).
    Home reading environment and brain activation in preschool children listening to stories. Pediatrics, 136(3), 466–478. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2015-0359

    5. Hutton, J. S., et al. (2019).
    Associations between screen-based media use and brain white matter integrity in preschool-aged children. JAMA Pediatrics, 174(1), e193869. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.3869

    6. Krugman, H. (1971).
    Brain wave measures of media involvement. Journal of Advertising Research, 11(1), 3–9.

    7. Lillard, A. S., & Peterson, J. (2011).
    The immediate impact of different types of television on young children’s executive function. Pediatrics, 128(4), 644–649. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2010-1919

    8. Lin, M., Jiang, W., Xie, X., & Luo, Y. (2023).
    Short-video addiction is associated with impaired executive function: Evidence from EEG and behavioral tasks. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 17, 1139400. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2023.1139400


    Feel free to drop your comments or share your personal experience in the comment section for further engagementsIf reading this post was helpful, share it with others who might need it. Subscribe to get new posts directly in your inbox and watch out for more.

  • Finding Relief from Burnout: Tips and Insights

    Finding Relief from Burnout: Tips and Insights

    Episode 1

    Standing before the students and panting silently, I felt uneasy. I could not understand what was happening. This was a class I had taught many times in the semester. It was quite familiar. But here I was, uncoordinated, disheveled and fidgeting internally. Everything in me, including my brain, felt rigid and uncooperative. No, it can’t be! I was just supposed to go in and walk out after two hours of lecture. But today was just different – it wasn’t going as planned. But it was too late because I was already in front a sea of eager and expectant faces. And this is the downside to being an adult. If I was a child, I would have just excused myself and left the class. So, I wrote the topic on the white board and started as usual. I felt I could just shake off the entire unwanted signal and get to the job. Then I realized that my tongue would not work well. It felt like my saliva had turned to rubber sap that held my tongue in cheek. Every word came out with so much difficulty. I also noticed that my mind went blank. Every single thing I knew seemed to evaporate. I could not even explain basic concepts with ease. Anyway, thank God for lecture notes. Somehow, I managed to pull through the two hours with much pain and dashed out of the class the next chance I got.

    Episode 2

    I stood before my congregation on this Sunday morning. It’s a small but familiar congregation I had pastored for about four years. I knew each of them personally. But something was not quite right. I felt uncomfortable and surprisingly uneasy. My heart was beating uncontrollably. Starting from the prayer before the sermon, I struggled to form the right words. All the right adjectives simply receded to some inaccessible part of my brain. I forced my way through the prayer and then went ahead to announce the topic. Then I noticed that I could barely look at the faces of my familiar congregation. Something about them made my heart to race. Each time I lifted my eyes to engage theirs, I felt overwhelmed for no reason. Suddenly, my well-prepared message deserted me. Apart from the Bible passages I read to them, nothing else came to mind. I could not even explain the passages. My heart started pounding and the sweat broke on my forehead. I wished I had not gone to the pulpit that day, but it was too late. The people came to church to be blessed and I was to command the blessings.  But I could not even command my own words. To worsen the situation, I felt sure that they saw through my struggles. I shortened the sermon and beckoned on my assistant pastor to lead closing prayers. I left the stage feeling tired, empty and disappointed. I was incapable of facing anybody after service. All I wanted was to just drive home and rest – on a Sunday morning!

    Episode 3

    In 2023, I was attending a workshop at Sandton Sun and Towers, Johannesburg. At first, everything went smoothly. After two days of lively presentations and interactive sessions, the atmosphere was quite familiar and convivial. The participants then broke up into task groups. My group asked me to present our report to the participants. It was no big deal at all. So I glided to the stage effortlessly with my writing pad and faced the now familiar faces. The first few sentences came out with ease. Then, suddenly, my mouth dried up. My tongue became heavy. The words started sticking to my mouth. Instantly, my fight or flight mechanism kicked in thus increasing my heartbeat. My mind felt like a maze and the only thing I wanted to do was just run! By this time, the familiar faces, now seemed like a sea of strange faces common in nightmares. I finally managed to read out the points with frugal elaborations and then my nightmare ended, but the emotional backlash did not.

    The burnout and panic attacks

    It is easy to draw hasty conclusions about the above episodes if you haven’t been through a similar situation. But I assure you, it is not what you think. The above experiences happened within the same season in my life and even aggravated to the point of threatening my public engagements. Over 70% of my core engagements require me to speak to an audience. This includes the classroom, webinars, conferences, church meetings, and board meetings. I came face to face with the mother of frustrations. Deep inside, I loved to do these things, but the thought of them became a nightmare. Just thinking about these engagements would just send my heartbeat to the roof. On several occasions, I woke up in the morning with severe palpitation. Even the ringing of my phone jolted me. I started limiting myself to only very essential activities which always left me exhausted emotionally after each appearance. But I was determined to push through this darkness knowing there must be light at the end of the tunnel. But fighting only served to intensify the symptoms and increased my frustration. To make matters worse, I did not even know what I was fighting. I wasn’t sure if anyone else on the planet had ever been through this experience. My fears were confirmed when I spoke to a few close associates. They thought it was a very strange and unusual situation. In fact, a highly respected and distinguished gentleman had invited me to chair his daughter’s marriage. Not wanting to embarrass myself or disappoint him, I attempted to let him in on the problem. The result was a long sermon. He lectured me on how someone as accomplished as myself should not be mired in some mysterious tongue-tying syndrome.

    My frustration had reached an unprecedented peak, but I was not going to let myself be rendered useless and invisible. It felt like a catastrophic turn of events from which I did not know if I would ever recover. So, I started looking for practical solutions. I fasted, prayed, meditated on the scriptures and listened to lullaby at night. I even visited the hospital, and I was referred to a psychologist. He complicated my frustration by declaring that I did not have any problems. Then one day, I was reading a book by Craig Groeschel where he narrated a personal experience that mirrored my struggles which he described a burnout! I stopped to reflect and bam, it dawned on me – I was dealing with a high degree burnout. So, how did I get here? If you are like me, you probably try to achieve a million things at a go. You might also try to squeeze twenty-five hours of work into one day. I was a serial multitasker, combining a wide range of activities – writing a manuscript, replying an email or text message, writing a letter, attending a meeting, etc. If I was in the middle of a demanding task and remembered a lighter task, I would quickly complete the lighter task to score a win for the day. Then, I would switch back to the other task. After a very long day at the office, I would go home, but not to rest. I would change my clothes and then immediately flip my laptop and continue from where I stopped. Sometimes, I would go on till well after midnight before dragging my exhausted frame to bed. I felt this unusual sense of urgency about every day. I wanted results to justify every ounce of effort invested. Someone once asked me if I ever got tired and I bragged that tiredness was unknown to me. But here I was, tired, exhausted and completely burnt out. As I searched for solution, I stumbled into similar experiences as narrated by other persons. Now I knew that I was not alone. Knowing that someone had been through what I was experiencing gave me hope. Of course, I did not just snap out of the problem overnight even after understanding what my problem was. Recovery was still a struggle and a journey but that only became possible because I took some drastic measures.

    Recovery is possible

    Among the several measures I took, I will just mention a few that I found quite helpful. Let me also add that there is no quick fix for a burnout. You might find what looks like a quick fix in several online articles. However, what the authors won’t tell you is that these things take time. The mind needs time to heal. Initially, I wanted a quick fix so I could just go back to my normal workaholic lifestyle but that did not happen. My mind simply refused to work the way I wanted. It was like when a laptop’s battery drains below the required threshold. You are left with no other option but to charge it. I once owned a laptop with a battery that would drain so completely that it required hours of charging to power it on. That became my personal experience. So, when I realized that this was going to be one long journey, I accepted reality. I did not stop fighting though, but I changed my strategy. One thing I did was a mind reset. I had to train my mind to neutralize the ever-present nagging sense of urgency. This sense of urgency used to put my stomach in a tensed mode while I was working. Occasionally, I caught myself in that mode and then I would just relax my stomach muscles. Another drastic change I made was that I minimized after-office work at home. I would rather read a book, watch the news or do something less mentally demanding. I also learnt to take breaks from work, especially if I start feeling pressured in my mind. In Africa, where vacation is considered shear waste of money, many people are likely to suffer from burnout, unless they have other means of releasing work pressure.

    Final Word

    A burnout is a terrible and life altering experience. Mine manifested in panic attacks but some people might not be that lucky. They might not even have any symptoms until they suddenly come down with a debilitating ailment or even drop dead. So, prioritize your physical welfare and mental health. Find an efficient way of releasing the stress so it does not accumulate. Take breaks from work at intervals. Learn to work smart and not just hard. Don’t try to do everything yourself in the quest for machine perfection. Delegate assignments whenever you have the opportunity. The truth is that if you die on the job, the job will not die with you. Someone else will continue from where you stopped and probably do it even better than you did.

    Feel free to drop your comments or share your personal experience in the comment section for further engagements. If reading this post was helpful, share it with others who might need it. Subscribe to get new posts directly in your inbox and watch out for more.