I, Human: how to join the analog revolution (and rediscover joy)
- Words by Donnay Torr
Yes, yes – I’m fully aware that you’re reading this online. But the best revolutions start brewing inside the Machine, right? (Call me Ghost.) Also, this writer hasn’t yet mastered the noble art of smoke-signal journalism, so let’s work with what we’ve got.
We’re living in the age of the ‘enshittification’ of the internet. A space that once felt playful, connective and expansive now just feels inescapable. Feeds optimised for outrage, AI rewriting ‘reality’, mass surveillance of our most intimate behaviours, algorithms nudging us toward extremes… And then there’s doomscrolling’, which doesn’t just steal our time and energy, but literally reshapes the brain.
It’s like we’re all Oliver Twist, standing in front of the Zucks and Besosians and Altmans, begging them to ‘please sir, take some more!’ And nope, that’s not hyperbole – if you feel tired, distracted, irritable or vaguely unwell after spending too much time online, it’s not just you being dramatic. Research consistently links excessive social media use and constant screen exposure with higher rates of anxiety, depression, stress, poor sleep and reduced wellbeing.
Being chronically online is making us sick: culturally, socially, philosophically, and even physically. (If you’re sitting down while reading this, get up and give me twenty burpees, stat!) Doomscrolling, in particular, has been associated with psychological distress and emotional fatigue. And let’s not talk about brain rot. (Although we probably should.) In short: this stuff is doing our heads in.
So, if you’re tired of algorithms running your day (and prescribing your music taste: thanks, Spotify), allow us this ever-so-slightly hypocritical attempt at getting you to jump offline and rediscover the imperfect beauty of the real world. (Bonus: you’ll be taking your attention away from and money out of the pockets of techbros, so there’s that.)
Ditch the tech
Delete your social media apps off your phone at the beginning of the weekend and then reinstall on Monday (if you must). Or vice versa. Anything to give your brain a break and make it a mild inconvenience to access them. Try just switching off notifications (those endless bings and bleeps are right up there with leafblowers in the audio irritation stakes). Bag the entire family’s phones at the start of the weekend and give them to the neighbours to lock up in a safe (or something slightly less extreme, but you get the point.)
If you need some help, use tech to help you ditch tech. Yup, really – there are programs that help you lock yourself out of your socials and minimise internet use with time limits, such as One Sec, Opal or Freedom. Our favourite? Author Hank Green’s ‘Focus Friend’ cozy gamified timer app just launched on iOS and Android: you set a timer, and for the duration, a little virtual ‘Bean’ character busily knits and earns rewards for decorating a room. Every time you leave the app to browse other things on your phone, you disrupt Bean’s knitting, causing it to drop stitches and making it sad. What better incentive to stay off your phone than to make sure little Bean keeps happy and knitting?!
Get a Library Card
Your local community library needs you! Libraries are one of the last truly non-commercial public spaces open to all, and they deserve to be protected and supported. Besides, what’s more fun, budget-friendly and sustainable (don’t come at me with e-readers, just no) than snuffling through the aisles, searching for the perfect read, returning it, filling up your tote bag again… Rinse, repeat.
We’re even keen on the formative experience of reading the first in a trilogy, discovering that book two is out for the next month, so you’ll probably need to discover the lost art of patience. (Talk about embracing the latest trend of friction maxxing!)
Books aren’t the only thing on offer, either. Libraries have evolved into repositories of all kinds of knowledge and events, whether you need literature, internet access, a space to meet with your craft club, or cool school holiday activities for your kids.
More analog ways to get bookish
- Start a book club. Whether you read the book or just delight in socialising with friends, it’s all good.
- Subscribe to your favourite magazine. Print is not dead! But it does need support. Besides, what’s more calming and ‘offline’ than enjoying a quiet cuppa while perusing your favourite read? (Which is, obviously, Peppermint magazine… Hint! Nudge!)
- Go on a Street Library Hunt. These small, weatherproof boxes filled with wordy treasures are such a delightful way of discovering new reads and learning more about the community you live in. Check out Street Library Australia, the New Zealand Lilliput Libraries map and the Little Free Library world map to find street libraries in your area, and start visiting them. (Want to level up? Build your own Street Library!)
Get your hands dirty
Yes, we’re talking about gardening: tried, tested and proven to be super good for body and soul. (Also a form of activism – check out guerilla gardening!) Plants don’t care about productivity hacks or body optimisation. They just want a bit of care, patience and presence. Which basically translates into: keep on pottering, keep on pottering… If you’re lucky, by the end of it you’ll get actual lemons. (A major win in my world.)
Don’t worry too much about not having ‘green fingers’, either: just start small (pot + nasturtium seeds + sunny spot = “why are nasturtiums everywhere?!”), check in every day for a meditative moment, and give your frondy friends a drink of Seasol every so often, please and thanks.
Don’t have a bit of earth of your own? Join a community garden – not only will you be learning lots of things from the flowers, you’ll also be meeting cool new people. Check out Community Gardens Australia for a spot near you. Or simply explore the beauty of other people’s work: the New Zealand Gardens Trust has a round-up of some of the most glorious gardens to visit in the country.
Go off (a real) map
Embrace the terror! Yes, I’m talking about planning an adventure without using GPS or the navigation apps on your phone. Getting a little lost is part of the point. Who knows what adventures await off the beaten track! Are you there yet? Probably not! (Can you hear banjos…?)
Fun fact: Once upon a time, Google Maps would lead you astray if you tried to reach the Blue Mountains in NSW: you’d end up in a lonely, woodsy dead-end street, facing an irate sign: “Blue Mountains is not here. (Google Maps is Wrong)” So you can’t trust the bots anyway. (This actually happened to me.)
Take photos on film
Buy and use a polaroid or film camera to document your events (and daily adventures). It forces awareness and care of what you’re photographing so that you don’t waste a frame, and will lead to more interesting, valuable pics to treasure, not just thousands of photos dumped on the Cloud somewhere, never to be looked at again. Also, it’s a literal snapshot of real life as it was – no filters, no AI effects, no removing of ‘unwanted’ people or pimples.

Go on a hunt for street art
Treat your city like an analog Instagram feed. Wander. Look around. Let yourself be surprised by the vast rainbow of colour and creativity that exists, whether you document it or not. And join the likes of those (me!) who think endless grey concrete walls deserve a little bedazzling…
Some ideas to get you started:
- Australian Silo Art Trail. Outdoor works of art on the most unexpected of canvasses, spread across the country.
- Australia’s best street art. A round-up of must-see street art and graffiti in Australia’s largest cities, from Melbourne (of course!) and Sydney to Canberra, Brisbane and beyond. But don’t discount smaller towns, either: like the little town of Katoomba in the Blue Mountains, NSW, which boasts an art trail featuring beautiful work by the likes of Mandy Schöne-Salter. And take a gander at the Museum of Brisbane’s Walking Art Tour, which we were lucky enough to experience.
- New Zealand’s Coastal Art Trail. Six days, 300 kilometres, some of the best arty spots on the North Island!
Start watching birds
Ever wondered what goes on in the minds of the feathery fiends that fill our skies? Of course you have. It’s time to go birdwatching. You know you want to. Tweet. Besides, it’s good for you: you get to meet a bunch of weird and wonderful people who know all the secret spots to escape the madding crowds and rediscover the panacea of silence. And you’ll find yourself steadily noticing more of the small, beautiful details that make the natural world tick. Birds lead to bugs lead to boronias. And this is a Good Thing. Check out ‘starter’ birdwatching clubs like Sydney Bird Club for a low-pressure introduction to the hobby.
Visit a Botanic Garden, Museum or Art Gallery
Immersion in ‘real’ spaces beats online info overload any day. These spaces invite slow looking – a skill we’re rapidly losing. Take your time, learn about the artist (or the blooms you’re stopping to smell) and before you know it, you’ll be both more cultured and calm. Besides, the more feet wander through our art galleries or botanic gardens, the more important they become to preserve as inspiring public spaces for future generations.
Learn a craft
Stop swiping and start stitching. Bringing a crafty skill into your life can help replace the scroll by keeping your hands and mind busy. If you don’t know where to start, buy a simple kit that has everything you’ll need – Craft Club, Hinkler and Journey of Something have plenty, or you could try your hand at Indigenous weaving with DIY kits from Ngumpie Weavers or Kakadu Plum Co.
To gently dip your toe into the crafty creek, there are plenty of places that loan tools so you can give it a trial run before spending your rent on fabric and machines (not that we are opposing that). Newcastle Library has a bounty of tools such as 3D printers and supplies for painting, linocut, crochet and knitting, while the Sydney Library of Things has everything from breadmakers to overlockers. Check your local library to see if they have tools they loan out. Join a craft group for some company and community – there’s bound to be one in your area. (If not, start one!) And yes, YouTube has an endless array of tutorials – we’ll go easy on the digital ban if you’re learning to crochet!
Host an analog movie night (or listening party)
This may take some effort, but just imagine you’re living in the Stranger Things universe. Find or hire a VHS or DVD player (and a TV that’ll connect to them), borrow DVDs and VHS tapes from friends (if you don’t still have a few – they’ll have to pry my DVD of Fried Green Tomatoes from my cold, dead hands) or source from nostalgic stores or op shops. Get everybody over to troubleshoot the system like the old days, grab the popcorn and press play. Alternatively hook up a record player and some retro tunes – nothing beats the sound of vinyl.
Rediscover writing by hand
Make a to-do list on an actual note pad instead of an app on your phone. Learn calligraphy at your local community centre or via a workshop, like Helen Kelly’s of Brisbane Hand Lettering. Be warned: it may take your digits some time to warm up to this unfamiliar activity. Send postcards and handwritten letters via snail mail – or ‘happy mail’ as the cool kids are calling it now. Opening your letterbox to find something addressed to you (that isn’t a bill or a magnet for a local plumber) with the tactile feel of pretty paper and the slow, curated words of a friend sure beats the bing of a new DM any day.
Be intentional
If you really struggle to stay offline, choose what you consume intentionally. Fill your algorithm with uplifting, inspiring and thought-provoking content where possible. Listen to an album from start to finish with your headphones on. Watch music videos on YouTube instead of being sent down a rabbithole of misinformation and mindnumbing *makers (*making money). Find content creators that you enjoy and go straight to their blog, substack or social page. Create lists and folders on your social media so you can find them easily, instead of getting lost in the rage-baiting rollercoaster of what Zuck or Musk thinks you ‘should’ see. It’s a difficult balance of keeping up with news vs protecting your sanity, that’s for sure.
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“My piece of advice for makers and designers? Run your own race… make sure your key decisions stay anchored in your brand’s core beliefs.”
- Bec Bligh
Quick show of hands: who’s opened a water bottle expecting a refreshing sip… and instead been greeted by the unmistakable whiff of uh-oh?
Because for something that follows us everywhere (desk, car, hikes, yoga…), the humble drink bottle is strangely prone to becoming a science experiment. Hard-to-clean corners and gaskets. Mystery smells. Bec Bligh and her husband Tim know it well. A six-month sailing trip along the Queensland coast left them with a lifetime of memories and one stubborn annoyance: mouldy water bottles they couldn’t properly clean.
So they did something about it.
Enter @EverVessel. Thoughtfully designed borosilicate glass and stainless steel bottles that keep things beautifully simple: durable materials, wide openings, easy-to-clean parts and none of the techy gimmicks that tend to age badly. Turns out simplicity, done well, is pretty powerful stuff. (Their many design awards agree!)
And lately they’ve added a little extra delight: the Artist Series, where creatives like Paola Castro, Ben Miners and Martin Thompson transform these everyday companions into tiny travelling artworks. There are more colabs in the works, too: hydration, but make it joyful! 🎨💧
We chatted with Bec about the sailing trip that started it all, the philosophy behind Ever Vessel, and why the most sustainable product is often just the one you keep using.
Tap the link in our bio to read the full conversation. 🚰
#EverVessel #ReusableWaterBottle
Pull up a chair… there’s room at this table!
For the first time, Feast for Freedom is bringing people together for a spectacular long-table dinner as part of the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival.
A Longer Table is exactly what it sounds like: one beautiful shared table inside the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (@Asrc1), piled with generous dishes inspired by this year’s hero cooks, Noha and Nige.
From 6 to 9pm on Wednesday, 25 March, this is what you can expect:
🍽 A three-course shared feast
🍷 Matched drinks
🎶 Live entertainment
✨ A room full of good humans
Your ticket doesn’t just buy you a delicious dinner. It supports the ASRC’s vital work and helps create a fairer future for people seeking asylum.
Seats are limited, and long tables have a way of filling up quickly – head to @MelbFoodAndWine’s website to book now: feastforfreedom.org.au/mfwf
#FeastForFreedom #MelbourneFoodAndWineFestival #LongTableDinner #FoodForChange
Sew versatile! 🪡
Another great make from Lisa from @SunnySewsEveryday:
My #PeppermintWaratahWrapDress is finished and I’m so proud of it. It has been designed not to flap open and flash your pants in the wind, so I feel confident it will be a great wheelchair or standing dress in English weather.
#PeppermintPatterns #WrapDress #WrapDressPattern
Frame your face with the Peppermint Bucket Hat!
Stay safe and stylish in the sun with your very own self-sewn and self-drafted wide-brimmed bucket hat. This beginner-friendly sew is perfect for a sunny day. Get out your pencils – this pattern is created using equations and maths!
This DIY project was featured in Issue 53 and now you can access it for the lovely low price of only $5.
Sun-safe chic is always in style. ☀️
Find it via the link in our bio!
Photos: @KelleySheenan
#PeppermintPatterns #PeppermintBucketHat #BucketHat #BucketHatPattern #DIY
✨ INSTANT CLASSIC ✨
The Peppermint Myrtle Shift Dress is a beginner-friendly make with a few special details based on the ever-stylish shift shape – the perfect dress you need in your wardrobe right now!
Myrtle cuts above the knee with options to customise the length. Don’t think she’s reserved for hot weather either: try a heavier-weight fabric to turn your Myrtle into a pinafore-style garment for layering.
For our fabrics we chose two from our lovely sewing partner @Karmme_Apparel – the bold Rottnest Stripes in a lightweight, soft-drape cotton, and the quality linen in the handpainted Mexico Collection.
Get making the Myrtle – the only question is, can you stop at just one?
Link in bio 🪡
Fabric: @Karmme_Apparel
Sewist: @Laura_The_Maker
Photos: @KelleySheenan
Models: @SerahSews and @Pins_And_Tonic
Location: @ShareTheDignityAustralia
#PeppermintMyrtleShiftDress #PeppermintPatterns
It’s time to Feast!
Some recipes travel a long way before they land on your table to delight your taste buds. This year’s Feast for Freedom invites us to gather our friends, cook something delectable and raise funds for the incredible work of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (@Asrc1) while we’re at it.
The 2026 Feast features recipes shared by two remarkable cooks: Noha, who brought the flavours of Palestine with her when she arrived in Australia, and Nige, a Sri-Lankan Tamil cook whose journey with food began in the most unexpected of places.
You can host your own Feast up until 30 April – simply register online and get planning! Host a dinner, organise a workplace lunch, or gather your community… However you do it, the idea is simple: cook, connect and celebrate the cultures and stories that shape Australia.
Want to find out more? Head to the link in bio to meet Noha and Nige, learn more about their stories, and discover a delicious recipe to try.
#FeastForFreedom #PeppermintMagazine #FoodForGood #ASRC




