After the Age of Acceleration: Turning Technological Abundance Into Renewal

A double-exposure image showing circuit lines interwoven with tree branches, symbolizing technology learning from nature and the balance between innovation and ecology.

By Leni Spooner, creator of Between the Lines.

The Season After Plenty

The twentieth century was the season of growth. The twenty-first is the harvest — a time to preserve, repair, and rebuild for a wiser spring.


How the Post-War Boom Became the Age of Excess

Every November, I’m reminded that progress isn’t a straight line. Nature has never worked that way — and neither do we.

The “we” I mean isn’t just you and me. It’s societies, nations, even the planet itself. Everything that lives, works, and grows has its season.

Since the end of the Second World War, we’ve lived through humanity’s long summer — the season of plenty. Factories turned from tanks to toasters. Suburbs sprawled, supermarkets glittered, and “new and improved” became the secular hymn of the age.
Growth was our creed. Bigger homes, faster cars, higher GDPs. We mistook accumulation for advancement.

But summer, however generous, cannot last forever. Fields that are never left fallow lose their fertility.
We can sense the cooling now — in the economy, in the climate, in our own attention spans.
We feel it in the frantic scrolling that brings no joy, in the sameness of every “new” app, in the weight of choices that no longer feel like freedom.
The world feels tired of chasing its own tail.


When the Growth Curve Hit Its Limit

Every civilization has its cycle: expansion, maturity, correction, renewal. The Roman Empire had its marble summers and dark winters. The British Empire had its steam-powered noon and its foggy dusk.
Each believed its own summer eternal. They were wrong.

Our modern myth lives in technology. For half a century we’ve believed in exponential graphs — Moore’s Law, faster chips, smarter phones. Computers doubled their power every two years, and we assumed they’d do so forever.

But as writer Michael Dain has argued, even our machines have seasons. The exponential age of computing — those decades of effortless doubling — has reached its natural limit. Moore’s Law quietly died about a decade ago, not because engineers stopped trying, but because physics itself wrote the boundary. Transistors still multiply, but performance gains flattened against a wall of heat and energy cost. Supercomputing began to look less like transcendence and more like overextension — a spectacular harvest that’s now straining the grid.


Living With the Consequences of Abundance

If the twentieth century was the season of growth, the early twenty-first is the harvest.
We have gathered astonishing tools: artificial intelligence, quantum computing, biotechnology, global communication networks. The barns are full.

Now comes the harder question — what do we do with the harvest?

In every agrarian society, autumn was followed by work just as serious as sowing: threshing, preserving, curing, storing. You couldn’t eat the harvest all at once. You had to stretch it through winter.

The same rule applies to technological abundance. Having built these tools, we must learn to preserve their value — to integrate them wisely rather than consume them mindlessly.

To resist this shift is to gamble with the future. A farmer who eats their seed corn in November doesn’t skip winter; they guarantee famine come spring — a famine born of foresight ignored. If we keep consuming as if growth were infinite, we’ll arrive at the next season empty-handed.


Learning From Nature: Why Forests Outlast Code

We’re beginning to remember that nature has been running complex systems far longer than we have. Trees share nutrients through their roots. Bees regulate hive temperature within a single degree. The ocean recalibrates its chemistry to keep balance — until we push it too far.

Our technology is finally taking cues from that quiet mastery. The “neural networks” that power AI were modeled on the brain’s own wiring. New analog processors mimic living systems — messy, adaptive, and responsive.

In nature, noise isn’t a flaw; it’s information. A forest thrives on interaction, not perfection. Our digital world spent decades trying to eliminate randomness, only to realize that brittleness followed.

The next wave of innovation may not be about speed or scale, but fit — technology that learns to live within its ecosystem rather than dominate it. Smaller, energy-light systems that work locally. Smart tools that adapt like trees to soil and light.

These aren’t downgrades. They’re the winter crop — slower growing, sturdier, designed to endure.


America’s Late Summer and Canada’s Early Harvest

Nations, like individuals, follow these same rhythms.
America, the great experiment, feels in late summer now — still powerful, still creative, but heavy with heat and fatigue after decades of overproduction. The soil there is rich but strained, worked and reworked until yield now suffers for want of renewal.

Canada enters this autumn from a place of relative moderation. While the U.S. pushed maximum extraction from every resource — digital, democratic, and natural — we grew at a slower pace. That restraint left us with more democratic topsoil to work with, not less. It’s given us room to plant for our own harvests again — in green energy, critical-minerals processing, advanced manufacturing, and civic renewal.

Sovereignty isn’t found in what we extract; it’s in what we can renew and refine at home.

If the last century’s challenge was to produce, this one may be to preserve — to make democracy, energy, and trust renewable.
We need policies that prize longevity over novelty: infrastructure that lasts, education that teaches discernment, and digital systems built for transparency rather than extraction.


The Repair Economy: Building a Culture of Endurance

The next great challenge isn’t creation — it’s integration. We need to shift from an economy of acceleration to one of maintenance and deep repair.

Call it The Repair Economy: a quiet revolution in values that prizes endurance over expansion. It’s about making what we already have work better and last longer — roads, grids, institutions, communities. It’s about teaching discernment instead of dependency, rebuilding trust where algorithms replaced understanding.

Stewardship is slower work. But it’s how civilizations survive their winters.


Canada’s Chance to Lead the Stewardship Era

For Canada, this global turn toward conservation may be an advantage. We have space, resources, and democratic habit — but also a chance to model moderation. We can invest in repair economies — food systems, housing, energy grids — that favour resilience over scale. We can treat technology as infrastructure, not spectacle.

Like a good farmer rotating crops, a nation can rotate priorities — letting extraction rest while nurturing creativity, community, and culture.


Progress Isn’t Linear — It’s Rhythmic

Linear progress is a Renaissance artifact. For most of human history, time was understood as a circle. The ancients knew what modernity forgets: decline and renewal are partners, not enemies. Every harvest begins in decay.

Technology follows that rhythm too. The “super” era of computing may be ending, but the humane era of computing could just be beginning — one designed not for dominance, but for durability.


From Preservation to Renewal

If progress was our summer, then care is our autumn. The leaves are turning — in the economy, in technology, in the public mood — but they’re turning into soil for whatever comes next.

This isn’t a time for torpor. It’s the season for conversion — for turning yesterday’s breakthroughs into tools that serve both humankind and the natural earth. The work ahead is quieter but no less urgent: transforming our technological leaps into systems that heal, connect, and endure.

We can’t rush this season. We can only live it well — with less panic, more patience, and the courage to rebuild for a new spring.

Progress, it turns out, isn’t a line to climb.
It’s a rhythm to learn — the patience to mend the fence, the humility to let the field rest, and the steady faith that renewal always follows the fall.


🕊️ If this reflection resonated with you, consider sharing it or supporting Between the Lines on Buy Me a Coffee.

Further Reading

The Things We Can’t Fix: Repair Culture, Corporate Control, and the Fight from the West
Why the right-to-repair movement matters — and how communities are reclaiming the power to mend what corporations prefer we replace.

Building Clean Steel: How Canada Forged a Decades-Long Pivot for a Greener, More Sovereign Future
A look at Canada’s industrial renewal — proof that sustainability and sovereignty can be forged in the same furnace.

The Canadian Economic Slowdown: What’s Holding Us Back
Exploring the roots of Canada’s economic drift and how smart policy — not speed — might be the key to resilience.

About the Author

Leni Spooner is a Canadian writer, researcher, and civic storyteller. She is the founder of Between the Lines | Kitchen Table Politics, a longform publication exploring how policy, economics, food systems, and everyday life intersect. Her work blends historical context with present-day analysis, helping readers see the deeper patterns that shape Canada’s choices — and the lives built around them.

If you enjoy thoughtful, independent writing, you can:
👉 Subscribe to Between the Lines to receive updates and new essays
👉 Buy Leni a coffee to support this work

💌 If you’ve found this essay thought-provoking, I’d love for you to subscribe to Between the Lines.

Subscribers get essays, digests, and occasional deep-dives exploring Canada’s shifting political, economic, and cultural landscape — all written in a calm, kitchen-table voice.

It’s free to sign up, and subscribers directly support the sustainability of this work.

Spread the love

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *