We know algorithms favor quantity over quality content. They want users to keep scrolling not sit thoughtfully with something. We’re told to find our audience, develop a static brand, track engagement, and turn people into data, as opposed to focusing on accessibility and creative exploration. How do you measure meaningful? We can simultaneously find ways to resist algorithmic harm on current platforms and imagine new platforms that nourish us. Slow communications is community-oriented content and PR, which prioritizes well-being and mindful engagement with social media and technology. It breaks down the binary of consumer and producer. Slow communications is rooted in disability justice: the algorithm wants us to show us predictably, and disability justice roots us in what it feels like to show, and create authentically. Slow communications is about relationality, imagining engagement as a practice of space holding. Slow communications imagines content as the nutrients of the soil–what do you need for this seed to grow?