Financial Doomscrolling Is Your Phone Making You Poor

We’ve all been there. It’s 11:00 PM, you’re scrolling through Instagram or X (Twitter), and you see it: a 23-year-old posing next to a luxury car or a screenshot of a ₹5 Lakh profit from a single trade. Suddenly, your steady job and disciplined SIPs feel inadequate. Welcome to the world of Financial Doomscrolling.

Before the digital age, we compared ourselves to our neighbors. Today, we are comparing our messy “behind-the-scenes” reality with everyone else’s “highlight reel.” This creates a psychological phenomenon called Relative Deprivation. Even if your income is increasing, you feel like you’re falling behind.

The Hidden Cost: Revenge Spending

Financial Doomscrolling isn’t just bad for your mental health; it’s a direct hit to your wallet. It triggers the Diderot Effect: seeing a trendy setup online leads to a spiral of consumption. You buy the lamp, then the desk, then the chair—trying to “buy” your way into a lifestyle you saw on a screen.

The Trading Trap: FOMO vs. Strategy

As a community of traders, we see this often. Seeing a 1,000% gain post can make your disciplined 2% Iron Condor feel boring. But remember: You see the profit screenshot, but you rarely see the 10 blown accounts that came before it. Doomscrolling makes gambling look like investing.

How to “Decode” Your Feed

It’s not about deleting the apps; it’s about changing the algorithm of your own mind.

  • 1
    The 24-Hour Rule: If you see a “must-have” item on social media, wait one full day. Most scroll-inspired urges vanish once the dopamine clears.
  • 2
    Mute the “Flexers”: If an account makes you feel anxious rather than inspired to learn, hit Mute. Your mental peace is an asset.
  • 3
    Track Net Joy: Focus on your own milestones—like reducing your home loan tenure or hitting your personal trading target.
Real wealth is silent. It’s in your paid-off debt, your compounding portfolio, and your peace of mind. Have you ever made a “scroll-purchase” you regretted? Let’s talk in the comments.

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