There was a time when moments simply happened.
You went to a concert.
You ate dinner with friends.
You watched the sunset.
And that was it;
No documentation.
No audience.
Just the experience.
Then the internet changed something.
Not suddenly.
Slowly.
Quietly.
Now when something interesting happens, our first instinct isn't always to live it.
It's to capture it.
A concert becomes a sea of glowing phone screens.
A meal becomes a photo.
A trip becomes a story update.
Moments aren't just lived anymore.
They're recorded.
The internet didn't just connect us.
It created an invisible audience.
Somewhere in the back of our minds, there's always the thought:
This would make a good post.
But something subtle happens when every moment has the potential to be shared.
We start experiencing life through a lens.
Sometimes literally.
Instead of fully being in a moment, we partially step outside of it.
We frame it.
We capture it.
We post it.
And in doing so, we become something new.
Observers of our own lives.
The internet gave us incredible things.
Knowledge.
Connection.
Opportunity.
But it also changed how we experience the present.
Sometimes the best moments are the ones that never make it online.
No photos.
No posts.
No proof.
Just you being there.
Fully.
Because the rarest thing in the age of the internet might simply be an unrecorded moment.
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