Back to Print
Written by Katie Gearns
As a classic millennial born in the late 80s, I grew up with the benefits of limited technology in a still mostly analog childhood. I recall circling products in a catalog for my birthday and Christmas, memorizing phone numbers for our landline, and checking the mailbox with anticipation for letters and magazines.
I lived through the evolution of email, which began as a total novelty. Checking my inbox was interesting, not anxiety-inducing. I was in college before people were on instagram and before we all had smartphones. Then social media took my young adult years by storm, and steadily life became more digital. Whatever could be put online was moved online.
Recipes. Books. Magazines. Community. Prayer resources. Even our quiet & intimate moments.
But lately, many of us have begun to feel the limits of a life lived primarily through screens. The endless scroll leaves us overstimulated but undernourished. Information is abundant, yet depth feels harder to come by. Our eyes are tired. Our attention is fragmented. And our souls long for something slower.
In response, many readers are returning to something surprisingly simple: print.
Not out of nostalgia, but out of necessity.
The Gift of Slowness
Print invites us to slow down.
When we hold a magazine or book in our hands, we are not tempted by notifications or hyperlinks. The experience is linear and attentive. We read the page in front of us, not twenty tabs at once.
Research has shown that people tend to retain more information when reading print compared to digital media. But beyond memory, print changes how we encounter ideas. It allows for lingering. For reflection. For margin notes and dog-eared pages.
It encourages a posture of receptivity.
In a culture that constantly asks us to consume faster, print encourages us to dwell.
Engaging the Whole Person
There is something deeply human about tactile media.
The weight of paper. The sound of turning pages. The quiet ritual of sitting down with something beautiful and well-made.
Reading print engages more of our senses, which can make the experience feel grounding and embodied. It invites a kind of presence that screens rarely do.
Many of our readers have shared that their favorite magazines live on bedside tables, coffee tables, and kitchen counters—picked up in quiet moments throughout the week. A page read while the bread rises. A reflection revisited before bed. A recipe folded open on the counter.
Print integrates into the rhythms of home life in a way digital media rarely can.
A More Peaceful Reading Experience
Another quiet gift of print is its freedom from advertising algorithms and digital noise.
Most online content is designed to keep us clicking. Headlines compete for attention. Ads interrupt paragraphs. Pop-ups appear mid-sentence.
Print, especially thoughtfully produced independent publications, offers something increasingly rare: uninterrupted attention.
Magazines like Evangelization & Culture Journal, Kinfolk, and Magnificat Magazine have embraced this slower, more contemplative approach to publishing. Their pages invite readers to sit with ideas rather than skim past them.
This kind of reading forms us differently.
It encourages contemplation instead of consumption.
Print & the Spiritual Life
For many Catholics, print naturally supports the rhythms of prayer and reflection.
Physical books and magazines often become companions in quiet places: beside the bed, in a favorite chair, tucked into a bag for Eucharistic adoration.
The physicality of print mirrors the sacramental nature of our faith. Catholicism has always understood that physical things—water, oil, candles, icons—can draw us deeper into spiritual realities.
In a similar way, a beautiful printed page can become an invitation to pause, reflect, and pray.
Words encountered slowly often sink deeper into the heart.
Creating Spaces of Beauty at Home
Print also has a way of shaping our homes.
Unlike digital media, which disappears when the screen turns off, printed publications remain present in our spaces. They signal what we value and what we return to.
A thoughtful magazine stacked beside a chair or resting on a coffee table becomes a quiet invitation—to read, to reflect, to slow down.
In this way, print is not merely content. It becomes part of the environment of the home.
A Small Return to the Tangible
The return to print is not about rejecting technology. Digital tools serve many good purposes.
But many readers are discovering that they need both: the convenience of digital and the nourishment of something slower, quieter, and more tangible.
Print offers a kind of retreat from the noise.
A place to rest the eyes.
A place to gather the mind.
A place to encounter ideas—and perhaps even the Lord—with greater attention.
And sometimes the simplest act—sitting down with a beautiful printed page and a cup of tea—can become a small restoration of the soul.
Why the Ember Journal?
An ad-free magazine is extremely rare today. With print costs high – and sometimes unpredictable – it takes commitment to deliver a quality publication without distracting advertisements.
Not only is The Ember Journal committed to being slow paced tactile media, but our content threads the needle of inspirational, practical, and deep.
As we approach a full five years of Ember, we invite you to join us as we journey deeper, with even more intentionality around the product we deliver to your homes.


