Becoming Digital: The Quiet Shift in Human Identity
There was a time when memory lived in stories. Not in servers. When worth was measured in character, craftsmanship, reputation built slowly over years — not in metrics refreshed by the second. When connection meant physical proximity, eye contact, shared silence. We moved differently then. Slower. Less optimized. More embodied. Now we live online. Not occasionally. Structurally. Work flows through platforms. Relationships pulse through notifications. Identity is filtered through curated profiles. Memory is outsourced to cloud storage, search engines, and photo archives. We no longer remember phone numbers. We barely remember directions. We remember how to retrieve. This is not just convenience. It is transformation. The human condition has always evolved alongside tools. Fire reshaped diet. Print reshaped literacy. Electricity reshaped sleep. But digital life reshapes something more intimate — perception itself. We measure worth through metrics. Views. Likes. Shares. Followers. Engagem...