You are going to wake up at tomorrow and think about the person you haven’t spoken to in , and instead of calling them, you will check your notifications to see if the blue light can drown out the haunting. It is a modern reflex, a digital flinch.
We have become experts at capturing the glow but utterly illiterate at reading the heat. I know this because I am currently staring at my phone, vibrating with the secondary embarrassment of having just sent a deeply personal text about the transience of human breath to a guy named Daryl who was only supposed to tell me if the radiator parts were back in stock. “The soul is a heavy passenger at the end,” I wrote.
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“Sir this is a Napa Auto Parts.”
– Daryl, Napa Auto Parts Mechanic
It was a mistake, a misfire, a message meant for a grieving widow that landed in the lap of a mechanic. And yet, isn’t that exactly how we treat the universe? We receive these massive, heavy, shimmering transmissions from the edges of our perception, and we reply with the spiritual equivalent of a shrug.
The Archive of Symbols
We take a screenshot of the on