Your battlestation pwns with the best of them, your laptop is the sharpest tool in your EDC and your phone is a literal miracle in your pocket.
However, the thing about those as it is now, it's 95% chance that they are made with modern day slave labour (sometimes literally by children), and using some very nasty chemicals which are a nightmare to recycle and which shouldn't be out in the soil unless you like poisonous food.
No! No! Hold your judgement. I'm not some anprim dimwit who would tell you to throw your tech out the window and go pick berries and nuts and stuff. Your gadgets are still amazing. It's not their fault that they are born this way. And besides, you'll certainly get poisoned by picking a wrong berry.
In fact, I will urge you to do the exact polar opposite of that.
For the sake of all of us, show your devices some love. Get really-really into them. Reuse them. Repair them if they're broken. Creatively repurpose them (this activity is also known as 'hacking'). If you can't, give them to someone who can do that for you, we're always looking for a job (and things to do).
Perhaps you know a "digital native tech shaman" (heh) in your family. Don't forget to pay them!
Upgrade only as needed, preferably gradually, and don't throw out the old stuff: you don't know when you need a spare or your little cousin needs one, certainly for school, pinky promise.
Don't upgrade often, don't jump on new and shiny. Moore's law does not dictate you to buy into every iteration. In fact, skip a couple of generations. It's better to be truly amazed by your next big upgrade, than jumping one and getting only 'meh.' performance growth. Learn the benefits of delayed gratification, and stick to what you already have.
For the sake of all of us, show your devices some love. Get really-really into them. Reuse them. Repair them if they're broken. Creatively repurpose them (this activity is also known as 'hacking'). If you can't, give them to someone who can do that for you, we're always looking for a job (and things to do).