
Eight years ago, my life was falling apart.
I was a young physician, fresh into practice. I worked days and nights. But exhaustion crept in. Sleep became restless. Focus slipped. Small mistakes followed. Things spiraled.
I felt restless. Clueless. Frustrated.
Close friends noticed. They saw the stress and told me to take breaks from work. They were right. But I thought I was already doing that.
The moment my work ended, I opened social media. I scrolled through updates from friends. I smiled.
But that smile was the problem.
That smile was a delusion. It poured fuel on my stress fire.
This dark phase became the start of my writing journey. Many of you have asked how I manage to write. Let me break it down.
I was trapped by Raktabija.
In Hindu mythology, the Goddess Durga battled a demon named Raktabīja. He had a terrifying power: every drop of his blood that hit the ground spawned a new demon, equal in strength.
The warriors attacked harder. They struck deeper. But with every wound, more blood fell. One demon became thousands.
Sound familiar?
My stress had drowned me in cortisol, the hormone that kept me restless and frustrated. Every social media post gave me a dopamine hit. That delusional smile. But it never let my brain rest. It kept cortisol high. Peace, happiness, contentment, all became distant dreams.
How did Durga finally win?
She didn’t strike harder. She changed the game. She became Kali, who spread her tongue across the earth to catch every drop of blood before it touched the ground.
I needed that kind of shift.
Social media multiplied my demons. I needed the opposite.
The Concert That Changed Everything
My epiphany came at a local music concert.
I watched the artists perform. Their smiles were different. Deeper. They were lost in creation. That look of contentment, I didn’t have it. Social media never gave it to me.
The peace on the face of someone who creates art was missing from my life.
Then I found the science to back it up.
A 2016 study from Drexel University, published in Art Therapy, measured cortisol levels before and after art-making sessions. The title: “Reduction of Cortisol Levels and Participants’ Responses Following Art Making.”
The finding? A 45-minute art session significantly reduced cortisol in 75% of participants. Skill level didn’t matter.
This was my ‘Kali Maata’ moment.
Social media wasn’t my solution. It was breeding more demons. I had to shift from consumption to creation.
How I Started
I had already begun reading, whatever I liked or friends recommended. I loved it.
Then I made a small twist.
I started jotting down ideas from books, articles, podcasts. I sat with those ideas and wrote whatever came to mind. No plans to publish. The Drexel study said skill didn’t matter. I wasn’t writing for likes or views.
I was writing for peace. For happiness.
Three Years Later
Life feels more beautiful now. I’m not that restless, frustrated person anymore. And if the science holds, my cortisol has probably returned to healthy levels.
But this isn’t just about me.
Life is stressful for all of us. We all need an escape, it’s natural. But we reach for smartphones and social media. And it makes things worse. The science is clear.
We need to create. Daily. Without worrying about skill or outcome. Just for the process.
It doesn’t have to be just drawing or painting. Sing in the shower. Dance in your room. Write. Cook. Garden. Collect things. Stitch. Whatever sparks something inside you.
We doctors always tell you to meditate. But let me say this: creating art can be a more engaging alternative.
Why I Write
Writing is my remedy for stress. Unlike the constant ‘cortisol fuel’ of social media, putting pen to paper (or fingers to keys) brings me a sense of calm and clarity.
And when people ask how I find the time, I say this:
“When you have a strong ‘why,’ the ‘hows’ and ‘whens’ take care of themselves.”
Let’s scroll less and create more this year.
Here’s to a happier life!

The hard truth for moving away from social media. Fully agree.
Thanks Kaka.
It’s too good & very thoughtful. Liked it very much.
You have taken the issue which has engulfed all of us. This demon aka scrolling aka social media hasn’t spared anyone. Right from innocent kids to school children to adults – all categories are getting affected badly.
Yes , as you have rightly said creating art is the solution to it.
The sentence saying – ‘to shift from consumption to creation’ is also a crucial thing.
Because ultimately social media & it’s algorithm thrives on increasing all sorts of consumption levels (irrespective of its category).
Be creative & reduce consumption levels –
as suggested in your article are truly the correct & essential ways to get rid from this monstrous demon !!
Hats off to you doc 🫡
Thank you so much Madhu tai. We have to use social media mindfully. Otherwise we are in for many demons to face in life, that’s sure. Thanks for the constant readership and encouragement.
Amit excellent blog, the way you wrote and give message how we can avoid frustration and get time for our hobbies is admirable
Thanks dada. I have realised that engaging in a creative activity is the best way to manage stress.
Beautiful, honest, and with a great idea. Just an experience, without giving a message. I loved it!
Thanks a lot Meena tai.
Mast re …it’s getting nostalgia every time reading the blog…you becoming a complete writer…all the best
Thanks a lot!
Very nicely written Amit
I will call it as DOPAMINE TRAP…
Even many studies also showed this addiction is worse than cannabis..
worried about future generation… dont know how they will gonna handle this…
Ya seems scary but there is always a way. That’s why I said ‘Let’s scroll less and create more!’. Thanks for the comment.
Dear Amya..what to say..straight from the heart..अप्रतिम..keep enjoying..!
Thank you very much sir.
So apt for today’s scenario! I loved the Raktbij Kali concept..I’ll choose art over science if have to make a choice between the two .
Absolutely. Thanks for the comment.