What If Einstein Had a Smartphone: Would He Have Been a Genius?

Our understanding of the world, of humanity’s place in the universe, and of the forces that govern it, was profoundly shaken by the work of Albert Einstein.

Understand

Understand

Understand

Jul 22, 2025

6 min

In popular culture, his name is synonymous with intelligence, knowledge, and genius.I found myself wondering: if the great Albert had lived in the era of TikTok and instant everything, would he have achieved and discovered as much?

More broadly, is the digital age a catalyst or an inhibitor of genius?

Albert Who?

Born in 1879 in Ulm, Germany, Albert’s interest in science was sparked when he discovered a compass at the age of five.

Albert Einstein as a child. Photo taken in 1884.

He was fascinated by the invisible forces that moved the needle—igniting his lifelong passion for what governs the universe, yet remains unseen.

At the age of 12, he was deeply impacted by a book on geometry, which he later referred to as his “sacred book.” This cemented his love for mathematics.

Would he have followed the same path if, instead of a book, his parents had given him an iPhone for his birthday?

In France in 2020, the average age at which children get their first phone was 9.9 yearsmuch younger than just a few years ago.

And then I came across this chilling graph. It showed a clear correlation between:

  • Mental well-being and certain cognitive abilities

  • The age at which a child receives their first smartphone

In short, the later a child gets a smartphone, the more likely they are to thrive (though of course, this isn’t a universal truth). You can dig deeper into the Sapien Labs study.

Back to Einstein. Despite the persistent myth that he was a poor student, he became an excellent one—especially in science.

After earning his doctorate in 1905, he began teaching while continuing his research.

In just a few years, he transformed scientific and philosophical thought with his discoveries about space and time.

He was, among other things, the father of the theories of special and general relativity. He even won the Nobel Prize in 1921 for the photoelectric effect.

Toward the end of his life, Einstein attempted—unsuccessfully—to unify all the forces of the universe into a single theory: the “Theory of Everything.”

Many consider him the most influential physicist of the 20th century.

Some of today’s technologies exist thanks to him—like the precision of GPS, laser devices, and the development of solar panels.

Yet we’re far from having explored all the potential applications of his remarkable discoveries.

Wandering and Gnius

Einstein liked to let his mind roam. He often stepped away from his physics work for long stretches to allow divergent ideas to come to him. Walks, retreats in mountain cabins, hours spent playing the violin, or sailing trips on his boat.

The Great Wandering

He would return to work with new ideas—some of which led to those famous “Eureka!” moments.

This ability to embrace emptiness—to let the mind wander without stimulationis stifled by our hyper-connected world. And yet, it’s a critical ingredient for creativity.

Constantly bombarded, we no longer grant our minds the luxury of emptiness, fertile ground for original thought. The burden of perpetual stimulation.

In his day, Einstein didn’t have the option to scroll Instagram, listen to podcasts, or be fed TikTok’s algorithmic suggestions.

And that may have been a blessing.

Einstein’s work demanded boundless imagination. It wasn’t just driven by analytical reasoning. He conceived of transcendent ideas, far beyond the scientific understanding of his time.

As he once said: “Imagination is more important than knowledge.”

So here’s the question: would the gravitational pull of the smartphone have outweighed his drive to study gravity itself? Speculating a bit, I doubt his genius would have reached the same heights if he’d been consumed by today’s digital noise.

1953: Two years before his death, still letting his thoughts wander.

One of Einstein’s secrets was his ability to concentrate deeply on ultra-complex problems for long periods of time.

Cal Newport, in Deep Work, argues that learning how to be bored is essential to cultivating this kind of deep focus.

Our habit of surrendering to distraction at the first hint of boredom erodes our tolerance for inactivity. We lose the ability to resist the pull of constant stimulation.

Einstein knew how to harness the creative power of stillness like no one else. And he had far fewer distractions than a modern scientist in 2024.

In popular culture, his name is synonymous with intelligence, knowledge, and genius.I found myself wondering: if the great Albert had lived in the era of TikTok and instant everything, would he have achieved and discovered as much?

More broadly, is the digital age a catalyst or an inhibitor of genius?

Albert Who?

Born in 1879 in Ulm, Germany, Albert’s interest in science was sparked when he discovered a compass at the age of five.

Albert Einstein as a child. Photo taken in 1884.

He was fascinated by the invisible forces that moved the needle—igniting his lifelong passion for what governs the universe, yet remains unseen.

At the age of 12, he was deeply impacted by a book on geometry, which he later referred to as his “sacred book.” This cemented his love for mathematics.

Would he have followed the same path if, instead of a book, his parents had given him an iPhone for his birthday?

In France in 2020, the average age at which children get their first phone was 9.9 yearsmuch younger than just a few years ago.

And then I came across this chilling graph. It showed a clear correlation between:

  • Mental well-being and certain cognitive abilities

  • The age at which a child receives their first smartphone

In short, the later a child gets a smartphone, the more likely they are to thrive (though of course, this isn’t a universal truth). You can dig deeper into the Sapien Labs study.

Back to Einstein. Despite the persistent myth that he was a poor student, he became an excellent one—especially in science.

After earning his doctorate in 1905, he began teaching while continuing his research.

In just a few years, he transformed scientific and philosophical thought with his discoveries about space and time.

He was, among other things, the father of the theories of special and general relativity. He even won the Nobel Prize in 1921 for the photoelectric effect.

Toward the end of his life, Einstein attempted—unsuccessfully—to unify all the forces of the universe into a single theory: the “Theory of Everything.”

Many consider him the most influential physicist of the 20th century.

Some of today’s technologies exist thanks to him—like the precision of GPS, laser devices, and the development of solar panels.

Yet we’re far from having explored all the potential applications of his remarkable discoveries.

Wandering and Gnius

Einstein liked to let his mind roam. He often stepped away from his physics work for long stretches to allow divergent ideas to come to him. Walks, retreats in mountain cabins, hours spent playing the violin, or sailing trips on his boat.

The Great Wandering

He would return to work with new ideas—some of which led to those famous “Eureka!” moments.

This ability to embrace emptiness—to let the mind wander without stimulationis stifled by our hyper-connected world. And yet, it’s a critical ingredient for creativity.

Constantly bombarded, we no longer grant our minds the luxury of emptiness, fertile ground for original thought. The burden of perpetual stimulation.

In his day, Einstein didn’t have the option to scroll Instagram, listen to podcasts, or be fed TikTok’s algorithmic suggestions.

And that may have been a blessing.

Einstein’s work demanded boundless imagination. It wasn’t just driven by analytical reasoning. He conceived of transcendent ideas, far beyond the scientific understanding of his time.

As he once said: “Imagination is more important than knowledge.”

So here’s the question: would the gravitational pull of the smartphone have outweighed his drive to study gravity itself? Speculating a bit, I doubt his genius would have reached the same heights if he’d been consumed by today’s digital noise.

1953: Two years before his death, still letting his thoughts wander.

One of Einstein’s secrets was his ability to concentrate deeply on ultra-complex problems for long periods of time.

Cal Newport, in Deep Work, argues that learning how to be bored is essential to cultivating this kind of deep focus.

Our habit of surrendering to distraction at the first hint of boredom erodes our tolerance for inactivity. We lose the ability to resist the pull of constant stimulation.

Einstein knew how to harness the creative power of stillness like no one else. And he had far fewer distractions than a modern scientist in 2024.

In popular culture, his name is synonymous with intelligence, knowledge, and genius.I found myself wondering: if the great Albert had lived in the era of TikTok and instant everything, would he have achieved and discovered as much?

More broadly, is the digital age a catalyst or an inhibitor of genius?

Albert Who?

Born in 1879 in Ulm, Germany, Albert’s interest in science was sparked when he discovered a compass at the age of five.

Albert Einstein as a child. Photo taken in 1884.

He was fascinated by the invisible forces that moved the needle—igniting his lifelong passion for what governs the universe, yet remains unseen.

At the age of 12, he was deeply impacted by a book on geometry, which he later referred to as his “sacred book.” This cemented his love for mathematics.

Would he have followed the same path if, instead of a book, his parents had given him an iPhone for his birthday?

In France in 2020, the average age at which children get their first phone was 9.9 yearsmuch younger than just a few years ago.

And then I came across this chilling graph. It showed a clear correlation between:

  • Mental well-being and certain cognitive abilities

  • The age at which a child receives their first smartphone

In short, the later a child gets a smartphone, the more likely they are to thrive (though of course, this isn’t a universal truth). You can dig deeper into the Sapien Labs study.

Back to Einstein. Despite the persistent myth that he was a poor student, he became an excellent one—especially in science.

After earning his doctorate in 1905, he began teaching while continuing his research.

In just a few years, he transformed scientific and philosophical thought with his discoveries about space and time.

He was, among other things, the father of the theories of special and general relativity. He even won the Nobel Prize in 1921 for the photoelectric effect.

Toward the end of his life, Einstein attempted—unsuccessfully—to unify all the forces of the universe into a single theory: the “Theory of Everything.”

Many consider him the most influential physicist of the 20th century.

Some of today’s technologies exist thanks to him—like the precision of GPS, laser devices, and the development of solar panels.

Yet we’re far from having explored all the potential applications of his remarkable discoveries.

Wandering and Gnius

Einstein liked to let his mind roam. He often stepped away from his physics work for long stretches to allow divergent ideas to come to him. Walks, retreats in mountain cabins, hours spent playing the violin, or sailing trips on his boat.

The Great Wandering

He would return to work with new ideas—some of which led to those famous “Eureka!” moments.

This ability to embrace emptiness—to let the mind wander without stimulationis stifled by our hyper-connected world. And yet, it’s a critical ingredient for creativity.

Constantly bombarded, we no longer grant our minds the luxury of emptiness, fertile ground for original thought. The burden of perpetual stimulation.

In his day, Einstein didn’t have the option to scroll Instagram, listen to podcasts, or be fed TikTok’s algorithmic suggestions.

And that may have been a blessing.

Einstein’s work demanded boundless imagination. It wasn’t just driven by analytical reasoning. He conceived of transcendent ideas, far beyond the scientific understanding of his time.

As he once said: “Imagination is more important than knowledge.”

So here’s the question: would the gravitational pull of the smartphone have outweighed his drive to study gravity itself? Speculating a bit, I doubt his genius would have reached the same heights if he’d been consumed by today’s digital noise.

1953: Two years before his death, still letting his thoughts wander.

One of Einstein’s secrets was his ability to concentrate deeply on ultra-complex problems for long periods of time.

Cal Newport, in Deep Work, argues that learning how to be bored is essential to cultivating this kind of deep focus.

Our habit of surrendering to distraction at the first hint of boredom erodes our tolerance for inactivity. We lose the ability to resist the pull of constant stimulation.

Einstein knew how to harness the creative power of stillness like no one else. And he had far fewer distractions than a modern scientist in 2024.

Your Phone, Your Rules.

Block apps. Limit time. Grow better habits. Endless possibilities.

Try for free

Your Phone, Your Rules.

Block apps. Limit time. Grow better habits. Endless possibilities.

Try for free

Your Phone, Your Rules.

Block apps. Limit time. Grow better habits. Endless possibilities.

Try for free

Long-Term Focus

Between 1907 and 1915, Einstein became increasingly obsessed with formalizing general relativity.

He worked so intensely that it strained his marriage and turned his hair white from stress.

During those years, he built routines to minimize distractions and focus on what mattered to him.

Fun fact: like Steve Jobs, he wore nearly the same clothes every day to reduce decision fatigue and lighten his mental load.

In So Good They Can’t Ignore You, Cal Newport writes:

“Einstein’s efforts on general relativity highlight an important truth about achievement. We are most productive when we focus on a very small number of projects to which we can dedicate a large portion of our attention. Worthwhile accomplishments require hard work. There are no shortcuts. Whether it’s starting a new student club or launching a startup, sustained effort over time is essential.”

It makes sense: the longer you pay deep attention to a subject, the better you get. The problem today is that our attention is fragmented. Interruptions are constant, and the pull of instant gratification is intense.

As a result, staying focused on one thing over the long term is increasingly difficult.

If Einstein had owned a smartphone and a MacBook, it’s fair to assume it would have been harder for him to maintain such sustained, intense attention.

What if Einstein Had Leveraged Tech?

Einstein’s brilliance would’ve likely helped him recognize the threat that modern technologies pose to our mental clarity and time.

In the age of YouTube and TikTok, I can picture him becoming a science communicator—sparking curiosity in the mysteries of physics and the universe.

Kind of funny to imagine him making explainer videos on a YouTube channel called E = mc².

Einstein surpassing MrBeast in the YouTuber rankings.

Using technology as a means to go further—as a creator, not just a consumer. Reaching millions directly. Inspiring future scientists. Einstein might well have found enriching ways to use technology—for himself and for the world.

That, perhaps, is the true intelligence of our time: discernment.

He likely would’ve used today’s tech potential to push his research even further. Maybe he would have finished his Theory of Everything and cracked the eternal “why.”

Had Einstein grown up in today’s digital culture, would it have stifled his potential with constant distractions—or would he have mastered the tools and elevated his genius?

The question remains open.

The Meta-Crisis

“I fear the day that technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots.”

A provocative quote, often attributed to Einstein, but one that feels eerily relevant. Where do we stand in our relationship with technology?

There’s a paradox: the more powerful our tech becomes, the more our cognitive ability to use it wisely seems to decline.

This “Wisdom Gap”—discussed in a previous edition on the twilight of truth—raises fundamental questions.The collapse of attention and the erosion of our ability to process trustworthy information aren’t just personal problems. They’re collective ones.

There’s a growing gap between the overwhelming power of our technology, and our capacity to use it with discernment.

And yet we’ve never needed solid information and focused attention more than we do now—facing complex, interconnected challenges.

Some call this the meta-crisis: an invisible crisis that amplifies all others—ecological, social, geopolitical… It lives within us. It’s tied to our understanding of ourselves and the world.

Two problems in our relationship to tech contribute to this:

  • Individually: How can we think long-term or tackle complexity if we’re fed a constant diet of immediacy and superficiality?

  • Collectively: How can we build shared meaning and collective action in a sea of endless, fragmented information?

These questions will only grow more urgent in the years ahead.

Being Anachronistic

I’m not a hermit living without technology. You’re reading this newsletter on a screen, and most of my research happens there too.

But diving into the lives of historical figures makes me think that sometimes, we need to make anachronistic choices. Embracing slowness, valuing patience, and honoring long-term thinking can be powerful antidotes to the urgency and speed that define our age.

This contrast may even spark innovation, originality, and personal fulfillment.

To me, attention—our ability to preserve and protect our minds—will be a massive differentiator in the coming years. And a key to collective progress.

That’s why I look to the past: to help guide a better way forward.

Embrace Slowness

If you’re looking for help—and a little push—to disconnect, we recommend the Jomo app. It’s available for free on iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

With Jomo, the goal isn’t to ban phone use altogether, but to use it more intentionally and mindfully. To stay in control—and not become a modern slave to that little device in your pocket.

One of our favorite features in Jomo is a rule called “Conscious Use”, and it works incredibly well.

The idea is simple: by default, your distracting apps are blocked. To use them, you’ll need to ask Jomo for permission.

You’ll be prompted to explain why you want to use the app—and for how long.

It’s a powerful way to create distance without frustration, and to regulate your screen time without going cold turkey.

Here’s how to get started:

  1. Download the Jomo app from the App Store

  2. Go to the “Rules” tab

  3. Scroll down to the “Templates” section and tap “Conscious Use”

  4. Add the apps you want to block, and you’re all set!

Long-Term Focus

Between 1907 and 1915, Einstein became increasingly obsessed with formalizing general relativity.

He worked so intensely that it strained his marriage and turned his hair white from stress.

During those years, he built routines to minimize distractions and focus on what mattered to him.

Fun fact: like Steve Jobs, he wore nearly the same clothes every day to reduce decision fatigue and lighten his mental load.

In So Good They Can’t Ignore You, Cal Newport writes:

“Einstein’s efforts on general relativity highlight an important truth about achievement. We are most productive when we focus on a very small number of projects to which we can dedicate a large portion of our attention. Worthwhile accomplishments require hard work. There are no shortcuts. Whether it’s starting a new student club or launching a startup, sustained effort over time is essential.”

It makes sense: the longer you pay deep attention to a subject, the better you get. The problem today is that our attention is fragmented. Interruptions are constant, and the pull of instant gratification is intense.

As a result, staying focused on one thing over the long term is increasingly difficult.

If Einstein had owned a smartphone and a MacBook, it’s fair to assume it would have been harder for him to maintain such sustained, intense attention.

What if Einstein Had Leveraged Tech?

Einstein’s brilliance would’ve likely helped him recognize the threat that modern technologies pose to our mental clarity and time.

In the age of YouTube and TikTok, I can picture him becoming a science communicator—sparking curiosity in the mysteries of physics and the universe.

Kind of funny to imagine him making explainer videos on a YouTube channel called E = mc².

Einstein surpassing MrBeast in the YouTuber rankings.

Using technology as a means to go further—as a creator, not just a consumer. Reaching millions directly. Inspiring future scientists. Einstein might well have found enriching ways to use technology—for himself and for the world.

That, perhaps, is the true intelligence of our time: discernment.

He likely would’ve used today’s tech potential to push his research even further. Maybe he would have finished his Theory of Everything and cracked the eternal “why.”

Had Einstein grown up in today’s digital culture, would it have stifled his potential with constant distractions—or would he have mastered the tools and elevated his genius?

The question remains open.

The Meta-Crisis

“I fear the day that technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots.”

A provocative quote, often attributed to Einstein, but one that feels eerily relevant. Where do we stand in our relationship with technology?

There’s a paradox: the more powerful our tech becomes, the more our cognitive ability to use it wisely seems to decline.

This “Wisdom Gap”—discussed in a previous edition on the twilight of truth—raises fundamental questions.The collapse of attention and the erosion of our ability to process trustworthy information aren’t just personal problems. They’re collective ones.

There’s a growing gap between the overwhelming power of our technology, and our capacity to use it with discernment.

And yet we’ve never needed solid information and focused attention more than we do now—facing complex, interconnected challenges.

Some call this the meta-crisis: an invisible crisis that amplifies all others—ecological, social, geopolitical… It lives within us. It’s tied to our understanding of ourselves and the world.

Two problems in our relationship to tech contribute to this:

  • Individually: How can we think long-term or tackle complexity if we’re fed a constant diet of immediacy and superficiality?

  • Collectively: How can we build shared meaning and collective action in a sea of endless, fragmented information?

These questions will only grow more urgent in the years ahead.

Being Anachronistic

I’m not a hermit living without technology. You’re reading this newsletter on a screen, and most of my research happens there too.

But diving into the lives of historical figures makes me think that sometimes, we need to make anachronistic choices. Embracing slowness, valuing patience, and honoring long-term thinking can be powerful antidotes to the urgency and speed that define our age.

This contrast may even spark innovation, originality, and personal fulfillment.

To me, attention—our ability to preserve and protect our minds—will be a massive differentiator in the coming years. And a key to collective progress.

That’s why I look to the past: to help guide a better way forward.

Embrace Slowness

If you’re looking for help—and a little push—to disconnect, we recommend the Jomo app. It’s available for free on iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

With Jomo, the goal isn’t to ban phone use altogether, but to use it more intentionally and mindfully. To stay in control—and not become a modern slave to that little device in your pocket.

One of our favorite features in Jomo is a rule called “Conscious Use”, and it works incredibly well.

The idea is simple: by default, your distracting apps are blocked. To use them, you’ll need to ask Jomo for permission.

You’ll be prompted to explain why you want to use the app—and for how long.

It’s a powerful way to create distance without frustration, and to regulate your screen time without going cold turkey.

Here’s how to get started:

  1. Download the Jomo app from the App Store

  2. Go to the “Rules” tab

  3. Scroll down to the “Templates” section and tap “Conscious Use”

  4. Add the apps you want to block, and you’re all set!

Long-Term Focus

Between 1907 and 1915, Einstein became increasingly obsessed with formalizing general relativity.

He worked so intensely that it strained his marriage and turned his hair white from stress.

During those years, he built routines to minimize distractions and focus on what mattered to him.

Fun fact: like Steve Jobs, he wore nearly the same clothes every day to reduce decision fatigue and lighten his mental load.

In So Good They Can’t Ignore You, Cal Newport writes:

“Einstein’s efforts on general relativity highlight an important truth about achievement. We are most productive when we focus on a very small number of projects to which we can dedicate a large portion of our attention. Worthwhile accomplishments require hard work. There are no shortcuts. Whether it’s starting a new student club or launching a startup, sustained effort over time is essential.”

It makes sense: the longer you pay deep attention to a subject, the better you get. The problem today is that our attention is fragmented. Interruptions are constant, and the pull of instant gratification is intense.

As a result, staying focused on one thing over the long term is increasingly difficult.

If Einstein had owned a smartphone and a MacBook, it’s fair to assume it would have been harder for him to maintain such sustained, intense attention.

What if Einstein Had Leveraged Tech?

Einstein’s brilliance would’ve likely helped him recognize the threat that modern technologies pose to our mental clarity and time.

In the age of YouTube and TikTok, I can picture him becoming a science communicator—sparking curiosity in the mysteries of physics and the universe.

Kind of funny to imagine him making explainer videos on a YouTube channel called E = mc².

Einstein surpassing MrBeast in the YouTuber rankings.

Using technology as a means to go further—as a creator, not just a consumer. Reaching millions directly. Inspiring future scientists. Einstein might well have found enriching ways to use technology—for himself and for the world.

That, perhaps, is the true intelligence of our time: discernment.

He likely would’ve used today’s tech potential to push his research even further. Maybe he would have finished his Theory of Everything and cracked the eternal “why.”

Had Einstein grown up in today’s digital culture, would it have stifled his potential with constant distractions—or would he have mastered the tools and elevated his genius?

The question remains open.

The Meta-Crisis

“I fear the day that technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots.”

A provocative quote, often attributed to Einstein, but one that feels eerily relevant. Where do we stand in our relationship with technology?

There’s a paradox: the more powerful our tech becomes, the more our cognitive ability to use it wisely seems to decline.

This “Wisdom Gap”—discussed in a previous edition on the twilight of truth—raises fundamental questions.The collapse of attention and the erosion of our ability to process trustworthy information aren’t just personal problems. They’re collective ones.

There’s a growing gap between the overwhelming power of our technology, and our capacity to use it with discernment.

And yet we’ve never needed solid information and focused attention more than we do now—facing complex, interconnected challenges.

Some call this the meta-crisis: an invisible crisis that amplifies all others—ecological, social, geopolitical… It lives within us. It’s tied to our understanding of ourselves and the world.

Two problems in our relationship to tech contribute to this:

  • Individually: How can we think long-term or tackle complexity if we’re fed a constant diet of immediacy and superficiality?

  • Collectively: How can we build shared meaning and collective action in a sea of endless, fragmented information?

These questions will only grow more urgent in the years ahead.

Being Anachronistic

I’m not a hermit living without technology. You’re reading this newsletter on a screen, and most of my research happens there too.

But diving into the lives of historical figures makes me think that sometimes, we need to make anachronistic choices. Embracing slowness, valuing patience, and honoring long-term thinking can be powerful antidotes to the urgency and speed that define our age.

This contrast may even spark innovation, originality, and personal fulfillment.

To me, attention—our ability to preserve and protect our minds—will be a massive differentiator in the coming years. And a key to collective progress.

That’s why I look to the past: to help guide a better way forward.

Embrace Slowness

If you’re looking for help—and a little push—to disconnect, we recommend the Jomo app. It’s available for free on iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

With Jomo, the goal isn’t to ban phone use altogether, but to use it more intentionally and mindfully. To stay in control—and not become a modern slave to that little device in your pocket.

One of our favorite features in Jomo is a rule called “Conscious Use”, and it works incredibly well.

The idea is simple: by default, your distracting apps are blocked. To use them, you’ll need to ask Jomo for permission.

You’ll be prompted to explain why you want to use the app—and for how long.

It’s a powerful way to create distance without frustration, and to regulate your screen time without going cold turkey.

Here’s how to get started:

  1. Download the Jomo app from the App Store

  2. Go to the “Rules” tab

  3. Scroll down to the “Templates” section and tap “Conscious Use”

  4. Add the apps you want to block, and you’re all set!

Credits
This article is a revised version of Edition #28 of the Screenbreak newsletter created by Julien Rousset. With his permission, we're sharing this high-quality content with you today! So many thanks to Julien. 😌
Photographies by Unsplash, Dall-e, ScreenBreak and the Internet.
[1] Newport - So Good They Can't Ignore You
[2] Einstein - Wikipedia
[3] 3 Everyday Inventions Einstein Made Possible, Thales Group, 2023.
[4] Schwaller - Why your best ideas come to you in the shower or on a walk, Dw, 2022.
[5] Albert Einstein, Futura.

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The Joy Of Missing Out

© Crafted in Europe. All rights reserved to Jomo SAS, 2025

The Joy Of Missing Out

© Crafted in Europe. All rights reserved to Jomo SAS, 2025

The Joy Of Missing Out

© Crafted in Europe. All rights reserved to Jomo SAS, 2025