The Reels Generation: How Kashmiri Youth Are Losing The Art of Thinking
By Muzamil Farooq
Ten years ago, a Kashmiri child’s ambition might’ve been to become a doctor, a poet, or an engineer. But today, many dream of becoming a “content creator.”
The smartphone camera has replaced the classroom as the center of aspiration. And for a growing number of young Kashmiris, fame, measured in likes, followers, and comments, has become the new form of achievement.
The shift represents a cultural and intellectual crisis unfolding before our eyes.
Social media in Kashmir has turned into a parallel education system, except that it teaches nothing. Children as young as ten scroll through a constant feed of short videos that reward visibility over substance.
These platforms thrive on algorithms that understand one thing: what captures attention fastest.
A fifteen-second clip of mimicry or dance triggers a surge of dopamine, the brain’s pleasure chemical.
Over time, this becomes a loop of craving and reward. Reading a book or solving a math problem cannot compete with that kind of instant thrill.
This change is a social shift that could redefine how an entire generation thinks and values itself.
School now feels dull, thinking slow, and........





















Toi Staff
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Tarik Cyril Amar
Mort Laitner
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Mark Travers Ph.d
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