đź“… Monthly News Reading

This website will show you a powerful newsfeed and links to interesting websites. However, it'll open only on the 1st day of each month.

Here it's a curated .xml file that you can download and use in your RSS news-reader such as RSS Guard, or upload it to a service such as inoreader.com.
subscriptions.xml

However, I suggest reading news once a month or once a year. Why?

In an age where information floods our senses like a relentless river, reading news through a curated RSS feed just once a year—or sparingly once a month—becomes an act of radical intentionality. By distilling the torrent of global events into a slow-drip elixir of high-signal, low-noise analysis, you stop wasting time and transform news consumption from a reactive habit into a ritual of discernment. This approach cultivates mental clarity, shielding the mind from the dopamine-driven chaos of breaking updates while sharpening your ability to distinguish true significance from manufactured urgency. Like an archivist reviewing annual ledgers rather than daily bulletins, you gain the perspective to spot tectonic cultural shifts and enduring patterns invisible to those drowning in real-time minutiae. Curated annual reviews reveal what truly shaped the year’s narrative arc, while monthly check-ins offer enough distance to let the dust settle on ephemeral scandals, leaving only substantive developments in focus. It’s intellectual permaculture: nurturing a sustainable information ecosystem where quality roots grow deep, unperturbed by the weather of hourly headlines. In this disciplined cadence, news becomes not a distraction but a compass—one that guides through the forest of modernity without getting lost in its ever-shifting trees.

Ignorance is bliss because not everything demands our attention—some things lie beyond our control, while others invite purposeful action. Information holds value only when it empowers us to improve our lives; beyond that, it becomes noise. Reading the news sparingly—once a month or even once a year—allows you to act on what truly matters without drowning in the trivial. Constant exposure, however, does more harm than good: it clouds your mind, sows anxiety, and molds your thoughts to fit societal norms rather than your own truth. By filtering out the uncontrollable and focusing only on what you can shape, you reclaim autonomy over your time, energy, and perspective. Protect your mind from needless clutter, and channel your resources into building the life you choose, not the one the world insists you follow.