So, open your bookmarks today. Not to organize them. Just to look. You’ll find a map of who you used to be, drawn one saved click at a time.
Scrolling through them is a strange kind of time travel. There is the link to the obscure forum thread from 2015, where strangers solved a problem you had on a laptop that has since turned to dust. There is the essay you loved so much you saved it twice. There is the online store for a brand that went out of business last year. Each URL is a mausoleum for a version of you that no longer exists. saved bookmarks
A saved bookmark is a lie we tell our future selves. “I will read this later.” “This will be useful.” “I need to remember this feeling.” We click the star icon or press Ctrl+D with a small thrill of organization, as if we are filing away a piece of time. In that moment, we are the curator of our own life, sorting the infinite chaos of the web into neat, labeled folders: Recipes, Work, Someday, Travel. So, open your bookmarks today
We collect them with the fervor of amateur archaeologists. A recipe for sourdough starter we swore we’d bake. A guide to fixing a leaky faucet. A meditation app we installed but never opened. A job posting from two careers ago. They are digital receipts for our best intentions. You’ll find a map of who you used