In an age where news multiplies faster than viruses and contradicts itself even faster than politicians’ promises, the average reader finds himself trapped in an absurd spectacle, unsure whether to worry, laugh, or simply switch off the phone and make a cup of tea. Every time the U.S. President Donald Trump makes a fiery statement about war with Iran, he follows it hours later with something that cancels it out entirely, as if politics has turned into an unscripted reality show no one can tell whether it’s staged or improvised. Meanwhile, the media races to capture every word, every “informed source,” every tweet, turning the public into the first casualty of this 24‑hour circus — where nothing is stable except chaos, and nothing is certain except that the reader will leave more exhausted than when he arrived.
This contradictory media flood generates a range of psychological and behavioral disturbances now widely recognized in modern research as news fatigue, a form of cognitive exhaustion caused by constant exposure to tense, unstable information. This fatigue is not just mild irritation; it manifests in clear disorders such as cognitive overload, where the brain struggles to process massive amounts of conflicting information, and emotional fatigue, reflected in anxiety, tension, and difficulty concentrating. A study by the University of Pennsylvania published through the American Psychological Association found that repeated exposure to negative news elevates cortisol levels — the hormone responsible for stress — and directly affects sleep quality and decision‑making. Meanwhile, the Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2024 notes that 39% of global audiences now avoid the news intentionally due to psychological exhaustion caused by relentless coverage, a percentage that has risen sharply in recent years.
Some individuals even develop symptoms resembling cognitive burnout, losing the ability — or the desire — to follow events, feeling that every new piece of information adds a weight they can no longer carry. In more severe cases, this pressure leads to sleep disturbances, attention fragmentation, and hypervigilance — a state in which the mind remains on constant alert, as if waiting for bad news at any moment. Over time, people lose trust in analysis, then in the news itself, and finally in their own ability to understand what is happening. That sense of helplessness is one of the most damaging psychological outcomes in times of crisis.
And because humans naturally seek certainty, the absence of it in political discourse only deepens the strain. When Trump says one thing in the morning and the opposite in the evening, the reader feels that truth itself has become ungraspable. This creates a kind of existential confusion, where one can no longer distinguish reality from noise, information from spin, or what deserves concern from what should be ignored. Eventually, many people begin avoiding the news — not out of apathy, but out of exhaustion. And that avoidance is itself a sign of how psychologically draining the media‑political landscape has become.
The problem, however, is not only with politicians or the media. It also lies in how people consume news: constant scrolling, chasing real‑time updates, relying on multiple contradictory sources — all of which amplify the pressure. Humans need distance from events, time to think, space to breathe. Yet they find themselves in a world that denies them all of that, a world that demands they remain constantly present, constantly informed, constantly anxious — as if calm has become a luxury reserved only for those who live without internet access.
And at the end of this exhausting spectacle, I offer the reader my advice as a writer who knows exactly how news is cooked and served: stop chasing uncertain headlines, and don’t let the flood of contradictory analysis steal your peace of mind. Choose two or three reliable sources, follow them in moderation, then put your phone down and go live your life. The world will not become more stable because you read one more breaking alert — but you will certainly become more stressed. In the end, nothing is worth losing your nerves over… especially news that even its creators aren’t sure is true or just another throwaway line in a day overflowing with noise.
(Abdul Hamid Ahmad is a UAE Writer and Columnist)