Metric Minds and Digital Selves
We do not move like we once did. There was a physicality to previous decades — walking to knock on a door, calling a landline tethered to a wall, writing letters that required patience. Memory lived in repetition. Worth lived in reputation. Presence required proximity. Now we live online. Not as an extension of life — but as an overlay to it. We wake to screens. We work through platforms. We socialize through feeds. We archive our lives in clouds. Photos no longer sit in albums; they sit in servers. Phone numbers are no longer memorized; they are stored. Directions are no longer internalized; they are mapped externally. We have not lost intelligence. We have redistributed it. Memory is outsourced to devices. Navigation is outsourced to GPS. Reminders are outsourced to notifications. Even reflection is sometimes outsourced to digital prompts. Convenience is not inherently harmful. But it alters cognitive texture. When recall is no longer necessary, the brain conserves effort. When searc...