Saved: Favourites ((new))

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Our favorites folders become digital graveyards—full of potential, but rarely revisited.

You saved it for a reason. Now give it the 10 minutes it deserves. How many saved items do you currently have? Be honest. I’ll go first: I just cleared out 347 bookmarks. Only 12 survived. Share your number below!

Examples: woodworking tutorials, marathon training plans, digital nomad packing lists. saved favourites

Saving an article gives us a tiny hit of dopamine. It feels like we’ve accomplished something—like we’ve already learned the information, even though we haven’t read a single word. We mistake intention for action . If you open your saved folder right now, you’ll likely find three distinct categories. Here’s how to deal with each one.

So go ahead. Open that folder. Unsave the guilt. And finally read that article about the pasta. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Our favorites folders

The goal isn't to have an empty folder. The goal is to have a folder so intentional that when you open it, you don't feel anxious—you feel excited. You see a handful of items that genuinely matter, not a thousand distractions that don't.

We’ve all done it. You’re scrolling through Instagram, and you see a reel for a 10-minute, high-protein pasta recipe. Save. A friend tweets a thread about negotiating your salary. Bookmark. A LinkedIn article promises "Five Productivity Hacks That Actually Work." Add to reading list. How many saved items do you currently have

By Friday afternoon, your digital "favorites" folder looks less like a curated collection and more like a black hole of good intentions.