Explanation

  • The act of spending an excessive amount of time compulsively scrolling through large quantities of negative, depressing, or anxiety-inducing news and content on social media or news websites.
  • Often done despite the negative emotional impact (anxiety, sadness, anger, hopelessness).

Origin

  • The term gained significant traction around 2020, particularly during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, election cycles, and other global crises.
  • It combines doom (referring to the overwhelmingly negative or catastrophic nature of the news being consumed) with scrolling (the physical act of navigating endless digital feeds).
  • While the behavior likely existed before, the term crystallized the experience of feeling compelled to stay informed while simultaneously being harmed by the constant influx of distressing information.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Getting sucked into the bad news vortex/spiral
  • Mainlining negativity
  • Obsessively checking bad news

Milder/Descriptive:

  • Spending too much time reading negative news online
  • Compulsively consuming distressing content
  • Getting overwhelmed by online news feeds

Situational Appropriateness

  • Informal to semi-formal.
  • Common in discussions about mental health, well-being, technology use, and reactions to news/social media.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • As a newer term, some might not know it. Explain it specifically means compulsively consuming *negative* content via scrolling, not just browsing the internet or reading news in moderation.

Examples

  • I was up until 2 AM doomscrolling about the latest crisis.
  • I need to stop doomscrolling; it's making my anxiety much worse.
  • He fell into a doomscrolling rabbit hole and emerged hours later feeling awful.

Dialogue

Layla: I feel so overwhelmed and jumpy today.

Omar: Really? What's going on?

Layla: I think it's because I spent all last night doomscrolling through news updates and Twitter threads about the conflict. It just sucked me in.

Omar: Ah yeah, that'll do it. It’s like a morbid curiosity you can't switch off. Maybe try putting your phone in another room tonight?

Layla: Probably a good plan. Need to break the cycle.

Social Media Examples

  • Tweet: Made a conscious effort to avoid doomscrolling today and read a book instead. Feeling noticeably calmer. Highly recommend. #mentalhealth #digitalwellbeing
  • Instagram Post: (Graphic about setting boundaries with news) Caption: Protect your peace. Step away from the doomscrolling. Your mental health matters. #doomscroll #selfcare
  • Reddit Thread: Tips for stopping the late-night doomscrolling habit?

Response Patterns

  • Shared experience/Empathy: Oh man, I do that too. / It's such a hard habit to break. / I know exactly how you feel.
  • Advice/Encouragement: Maybe try setting screen time limits? / You should take a break from the news. / Try to focus on positive things.
  • Concern: That doesn't sound healthy. / Are you okay?

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

  • Discussing the triggers or topics leading to doomscrolling.
  • Sharing strategies to reduce or stop the behavior (e.g., deleting apps, setting timers, finding alternative activities).
  • Talking about the emotional impact and ways to cope.

Conversation Starter

  • Yes. Can initiate conversations about technology habits, mental health, and coping with current events. Do you ever catch yourself doomscrolling? / How do you avoid doomscrolling?

Intonation

  • Emphasis often on DOOMSCROLLING: DOOMscrolling.
  • Tone is usually self-critical, weary, anxious, cautionary, or resigned.

Generation Differences

  • Term is relatively new (post-2020), most frequently used and recognized by those active online during recent years (Millennials, Gen Z, some Gen X). The behavior itself can affect anyone with smartphone/internet access.

Regional Variations

  • Universal term within English-speaking online culture.
Trolling