We can look at the potential of tech, but we should never forget the early days of the internet which was battered by waves of porn. It was brutal, and hard to avoid. The net was monetized pretty quickly, and could be a dark place pretty early.
I think we're all reacting to the changes tech has brought, in many different ways. There are a few people on the forum who are exploring old ways of living, and who are making things with their hands. My daughters are into gardening, and they keep finding amazing heirloom plants, and circles of young urban people propagating them as a (I think) an attempt to escape.
Whistling arrows (or badger), old spartan - I read what you do with projects and it is very challenging stuff.
A lot of the people I know who are in the trades have their high tech skills at work, but they do woodworking with old tools, furniture building etc in their downtime.
I meet crafters - weavers, ale makers, rug hookers, needlepoint artists - people who do things machines can replace them at, because there's a joy in creating. People are relearning old skills. If I can encourage a local artisan, bring it on. It's something made for the pleasure of making.
I'm a history person, and in many ways I see our lives as like those at the start of the Industrial Revolution. Something is developing that we don't control, and we're getting really upset about it. We can all go wild blaming, but it's on no matter how much it scares people. I like this coping by literally carving out our spaces, and the craftsmanship it keeps alive. I think at its best, it keeps us alive.
It's not even living in the past, to me, as I'm seeing people do things that weren't mainstream in my past. Maybe they're skills my great grandparents would have saluted, but they are great skills and they're moving forward.
I just get by by keeping fish whose evolution goes back millions of years. I think with fish breeding, I'm tapping into my Neolithic farmer instincts.