Paper boosts information engagement
Your hands help your brain
Reading and writing on paper is tactile in a way screens simply can’t replicate. The texture of the page, the weight of a pen, the act of physically turning something over—all of that engages your brain differently.
The physical connection required when you go analog slows you down just enough to actually process what you’re taking in, rather than skimming the surface and moving on.


Better health and screen time
Give your eyes a break
Screens are hard work on your eyes, your posture, and your nervous system. The blue light, the refresh rate, the endless scroll—your body registers all of it, even when you don’t. Paper asks nothing of any of them.
Paper doesn’t glow, ping, or update. Sometimes the most restorative thing you can do is just put the device down and pick up something that stays still.
Higher retention and comprehension
You actually absorb information
No notifications. No rabbit holes. No algorithm deciding what you see next. Just you and the page and ideas that actually stick when learning. Research consistently shows that people retain information better when they read it in print.
Without the constant pull of something new, your brain gets the chance to do what it does best: go deep, make connections, and remember.


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