When They Gave Us Masks, We Gave Up Our Faces

They said it was for our safety. And maybe, for a time, it was. But somewhere along the way, the mask didn’t just cover our mouths— It began to swallow our selves . We used to wear faces. Now we wear roles. Now we wear silence. Now we wear filtered versions of who we think we’re supposed to be. The mask became more than cloth. It became comfort. It became compliance. It became camouflage. And the longer we wore them, the more we forgot what it felt like to be seen . We stopped making eye contact. We stopped speaking truth. We stopped showing emotion, because vulnerability was too dangerous. Or worse—too inconvenient. And when the masks came off, something haunting remained: The absence of identity. A generation now scrolls through life wearing new masks— Curated profiles. Echoed opinions. Emotionally sanitized performances of humanity. Ask someone how they are. You’ll get a script. Ask who they are. You’ll get a blank stare. We lost more than time during the...