
Where curiosity meets connection
Think &
Think Again.
A conversation starter, by Jeanne

Most technology products/innovation seem to promise the same thing: Do more, faster. And I find myself wondering, is that actually what I/we want?
Speed is useful. In a crisis, for mundane/repetitive tasks, like admin maybe… But when faster becomes the default, as it has, in all areas of life, then I think it becomes a problem in that it suppresses the process of maturity, expansive thinking, creative problem solving. Ultimately, it makes us think less… which in itself isn’t great.
If you think about it, technology saves us time (in theory). But what do we actually do with it? Do we use it to think more carefully about a decision? To improve an idea beyond the obvious first draft? To have a longer conversation? To sit with something that makes us uncomfortable and really examine it? Or do we simply fill the space with more tasks, more scrolling, more urgency?
In my work, the best ideas rarely arrive first. They come after letting a problem sit, after questioning assumptions, after resisting the urge to land on the quick answer, after discussing each others opinions and perspectives. All this takes TIME.
I am not anti-speed. I am just not convinced “more, faster” is always the desirable outcome.
Curious how others think about this: where in your life does faster/slower actually lead to better? And what do you do with the time saved?
💬 A quick note: replies can be easy to miss here, so feel free to add a new comment rather than replying directly. This isn’t a fast-fire space, it’s intentionally slower, and shaped for thoughtful engagement with the ideas themselves, rather than back-and-forth responses.
Nile Seguin
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Mar 9, 2026
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This is an interesting point and I think it's tied with the western/capitalist/hustle culture mindset because I don't think the default assumption for tools that save us time is to think: "So you'll be able to have more time to enjoy with friend and family!" I think the default is: so you will be able to get even more done during the day. It's pretty sneaky and is the root of the problem in my opinion. I think the tools would be fine for the most part (I do think AI risks causing skill rot I think it's called) but the bigger issue is what we've been conditioned to do with those tools.
Lani Beer
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Mar 13, 2026
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I’m noticing how fast the world is moving, and how quickly we feel we need to respond. It makes me wonder whether our rush isn’t about efficiency at all, but fear... fear that if we sit with something long enough for real insight to emerge, the moment will pass without us. Maybe the real tension isn’t between fast and slow, but between reacting and actually trusting ourselves to stay with what matters.
Dennis
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Mar 19, 2026
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yes, very interesting thought. I came across this already before the AI wave and liked the question of: “where did all the saved time go to when washing machines and dishwashers entered the households?” Humans will always find ways to use their available time to further their productivity and with that (and through that) their happiness. Creating and contributing is what we are doing. 😃
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