Saved Favourites May 2026

So go ahead. Open that folder. Unsave the guilt. And finally read that article about the pasta.

Examples: woodworking tutorials, marathon training plans, digital nomad packing lists.

We’ve all done it. You’re scrolling through Instagram, and you see a reel for a 10-minute, high-protein pasta recipe. Save. A friend tweets a thread about negotiating your salary. Bookmark. A LinkedIn article promises "Five Productivity Hacks That Actually Work." Add to reading list. saved favourites

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Our favorites folders become digital graveyards—full of potential, but rarely revisited.

You saved it for a reason. Now give it the 10 minutes it deserves. How many saved items do you currently have? Be honest. I’ll go first: I just cleared out 347 bookmarks. Only 12 survived. Share your number below! So go ahead

The goal isn't to have an empty folder. The goal is to have a folder so intentional that when you open it, you don't feel anxious—you feel excited. You see a handful of items that genuinely matter, not a thousand distractions that don't.

By Friday afternoon, your digital "favorites" folder looks less like a curated collection and more like a black hole of good intentions. And finally read that article about the pasta

You clicked "save for later." But when is later?