Monday, April 20, 2026

How technology is failing the elderly: The simple solutions no one is implementing

 

A photo of an elderly person struggling to use a modern smartphone, sitting at a table with soft natural light and a light-colored background.

A photo of an elderly person struggling to use a modern smartphone, sitting at a table with soft natural light and a light-colored background.


Technology was supposed to make life easier for everyone. Instead, for millions of elderly people across Europe and the world, it has quietly become a barrier, a wall between them and the services, relationships, and independence they once took for granted.

 

While companies race to build faster apps and smarter devices, the people who need simplicity the most are being left behind.

 

Digital services are replacing human contact, and seniors are the collateral damage.

 

Banks, hospitals, transport systems, and government offices have shifted almost entirely to digital platforms. For the younger generations, this is convenient; however, for seniors, it often means exclusion.

 

Many cannot navigate multi-step authentication, QR codes, or constantly changing interfaces. What used to be a simple task, booking a doctor’s appointment or renewing a bus pass, now feels like a maze designed without them in mind.

 

Devices are becoming more complex, not more accessible.

 

Smartphones, tablets, and even televisions now require updates, passwords, cloud accounts, and app management.

 

Seniors who grew up in an analog world are suddenly expected to understand digital ecosystems. Instead of empowering them, technology often makes them feel inadequate, dependent, or invisible.

 

Tech companies design for youth, not for aging bodies

Small icons, low contrast, fast-moving menus, and touchscreens that require precision all create unnecessary obstacles.

 

Arthritis, reduced vision, slower reaction times, and cognitive changes are rarely considered in mainstream design. Accessibility features exist, but they are hidden, complicated, or poorly explained.

 

Online safety is a battlefield seniors are losing.

 

Scams, phishing, fake websites, and AI-generated fraud disproportionately target the elderly.


Related post: The silent epidemic of loneliness among seniors in Europe


Without proper guidance, many fall victim to schemes that drain savings or compromise personal data. The digital world is dangerous, and seniors are navigating it without armor.

 

Loneliness is amplified by digital isolation.

 

When communication moves to WhatsApp, video calls, and social media, seniors who struggle with technology become socially disconnected.

 

They miss family updates, invitations, photos, and conversations. Technology, instead of connecting generations, is widening the emotional gap.

 

Simple solutions no one is implementing

 

Universal senior-friendly design standards

 

Just as buildings require ramps and elevators, digital platforms should follow mandatory accessibility guidelines for seniors: larger text, high contrast, simplified navigation, and voice-first interfaces.

 

Human support must remain an option.

 

Banks, hospitals, and public services should maintain walk-in counters and phone lines staffed by real people. Digital convenience should never replace human dignity.

 

Community-based digital training

 

Local libraries, community centers, and senior homes could offer weekly digital skills sessions. Not rushed, not patronizing, but patient, practical, and empowering.

 

Devices built specifically for aging users

 

Not “dumbed down” devices, but thoughtfully designed ones. Clear menus, fewer steps, physical buttons, and built-in scam protection would transform daily life for millions.

 

Family involvement as a digital safety net

 

Simple shared access tools could allow trusted relatives to help seniors manage passwords, updates, and security without invading privacy.

 

The truth: technology isn’t failing the elderly; society is

 

The solutions exist; they are simple, affordable, and humane; however, they require one thing the tech industry rarely prioritizes: empathy. 


Until we design technology with seniors in mind, millions will continue to be excluded from the digital world that claims to serve everyone.

 

Sunday, April 19, 2026

When giants fall: The life, death, and immortal legacy of André the Giant

 

Portrait of André the Giant in a wrestling arena, highlighting his massive stature and iconic presence.

Portrait of André the Giant in a wrestling arena, highlighting his massive stature and iconic presence.


If you love wrestling, you don’t just love the sport; you love the people who shaped it. You learn their stories, their triumphs, their heartbreaks, and sometimes, the tragic ways their lives ended.


Wrestling has seen its share of sorrow: accidental deaths like Owen Hart’s fall, careers destroyed by addiction, and even suicides. However, among these stories, one stands apart: the strange, almost poetic death of André the Giant.


André René Roussimoff, born in 1946 in Coulommiers, France, was unlike anyone the wrestling world had ever seen. Standing over 7 feet 4 inches and weighing more than 500 pounds, his size came from gigantism, caused by excess growth hormone.  


His presence was overwhelming in the ring, on screen, and even in everyday life. However, before the fame and legacy, he was simply a young French boy growing too fast for the world around him. By age 12, he was already 6'3".  

 

He left school early, worked on farms, and eventually found his way into wrestling, debuting in 1966. André’s fame exploded when he moved to North America in the early 1970s. Promoter Vincent J. McMahon booked him as a “special attraction,” sending him across the U.S. and Japan.  


Related post: How Dante Chen carved a path as the only wrestler from Singapore in WWE history


He became a global superstar, the “Eighth Wonder of the World,” but outside the ring, André lived. He loved quiet cafés, long conversations, and watching life pass by, the same way Parisians sit in sidewalk cafés facing the street, not each other.


He enjoyed observing people, not performing for them. This contrast, the roaring chaos of arenas versus the gentle rhythm of ordinary life, defined him. Wrestling fans remember André for WrestleMania III, where 90,000 fans watched him face Hulk Hogan.  

 

However, his legacy is not just athletic; it is architectural in scale. Like the gargoyles of Notre Dame, “surreal, bestial chisellings” that seem to watch and judge, André’s presence felt carved from myth. His silhouette was unmistakable, and his shadow stretched across generations.


The Final Journey — Death in the Country of His Birth


In January 1993, André returned to France to bury his father. After the funeral, he stayed in a Paris hotel, and there, quietly, he died in his sleep from congestive heart failure at age 46. It was a rare, almost poetic ending.

Related post: When betrayal becomes a tradition: The uncertain future of WWE's Judgment Day


A giant who spent his life traveling the world, adored by millions, died alone in the city where he was born, just after saying goodbye to the man who raised him. His ashes were later scattered on his ranch in North Carolina, fulfilling his final wish.


André’s story teaches us something profound. Fame does not protect you from loneliness, strength does not protect you from fragility, and being loved by millions does not replace being loved by a few. He lived a life larger than life itself, yet died in a moment of quiet humanity.


Every year at WrestleMania, WWE honors him with the André the Giant Memorial Battle Royal, a tribute to the man who helped build the foundation of modern wrestling. This year, Royce Keys emerged as the winner. 

Why modern relationships fail: The 7 behaviors destroying love today

 

An image of a couple sitting apart on a couch, looking emotionally distant, with a soft neutral background.

An image of a couple sitting apart on a couch, looking emotionally distant, with a soft neutral background.


Modern relationships are collapsing at a rate we’ve never seen before. It’s not because people love less or because romance has lost its meaning. The truth is simpler and more painful.

 

Our behaviors have changed faster than our ability to love. We live in a world of distractions, instant gratification, and emotional shortcuts, and these habits quietly destroy the foundations of connection.

 

1.      Emotional Laziness

 

Many people want the rewards of love without responsibility. They want affection, loyalty, and support, but they avoid the emotional work that keeps a relationship alive.

 

Real love requires effort, listening, understanding, apologizing, and growing. Emotional laziness replaces all of that with excuses and avoidance.

 

2.      Digital Infidelity

 

Cheating today doesn’t always involve physical contact. It begins with secret chats, latenight messages, flirty comments, and emotional attachments formed online.

 

These “small” betrayals create big cracks. Digital infidelity is silent, addictive, and easy to hide, which makes it even more dangerous.

 

3.      Unrealistic Expectations

 

Social media has created a fantasy version of love—perfect couples, perfect bodies, perfect lifestyles, all edited and filtered. Real partners cannot compete with illusions.

 

Related post: When love breaks: How to speak after you have caused the pain

 

When expectations become unrealistic, disappointment becomes inevitable. Many relationships fail not because partners are incompatible, but because expectations are impossible.

 

4.      Poor Communication Skills

 

People talk more than ever yet understand each other less. Arguments replace conversations. Reactions replace reflection. Instead of understanding, many listen only to defend themselves.

 

Without honest communication, love suffocates under misunderstandings and unspoken resentment.

 

5.      Fear of Vulnerability

 

Everyone wants intimacy, but few want to be emotionally exposed. Vulnerability feels risky, especially in a world where people fear being judged, rejected, or abandoned.

 

However, without vulnerability, relationships remain shallow, and love cannot grow where walls are higher than trust.

 

6.      The Disposable Mindset

 

Dating apps have trained people to believe that partners are replaceable. One argument? Swipe. One flaw? Swipe. One uncomfortable moment? Swipe.

 

This disposable mindset destroys commitment. Instead of fixing problems, people replace partners, forgetting that every new relationship eventually faces the same challenges.

 

7Lack of Shared Purpose

 

Love is more than chemistry. It needs direction. Couples who don’t share goals, values, or a sense of purpose eventually drift apart. Without a shared mission, whether family, growth, faith, or dreams, love loses its anchor and becomes easy to abandon.

 

Love Isn’t the Problem—Our Behaviors Are

 

Modern relationships fail not because love has weakened, but because our habits have. We are more distracted, more impatient, and more afraid than ever.

 

However, love still survives in those who choose to nurture it, with effort, honesty, vulnerability, and purpose. Love doesn’t die on its own. We kill it when we stop protecting it.