We live in a world that rewards excitement, speed, and constant wanting.
Every notification pulls attention outward.
Every comparison rewrites desire.
Every achievement quietly moves the finish line.
The result is not fulfillment-but fatigue.
Serotonin Over Dopamine is a reflective exploration of modern life in an age of constant stimulation. It examines why calm now feels unfamiliar, why relationships feel fragile, and why even success can leave a quiet sense of emptiness.
Rather than offering hacks, routines, or promises of instant change, this book invites understanding. Through thoughtful reflections on attention, love, work, identity, and emotional regulation, Galib Ahmed explores how a dopamine-driven culture has reshaped our expectations-and why stability, presence, and depth are so often mistaken for boredom.
This is a book for readers who feel overwhelmed but cannot fully explain why.
For those who have achieved enough, yet feel it is never enough.
For those who sense that a quieter life may be a stronger one.
Serotonin Over Dopamine does not argue against ambition or desire. It asks a deeper question: what sustains us when the excitement fades?
In a world addicted to highs, choosing calm becomes an act of clarity.
Choose what lasts, not what excites.