Time Recycle
(Audio Deep Dive English; Audio Deep Dive Bangla)
We are now 15 days away from the "new year" and thankfully the initial salvo of mass-mailed good wishes - fired
off through digital networks with military precision and emotional
emptiness - has finally died down and we are back to the routine "Morning" and other such meaningless statements on WhatsApp and other platforms. It is time to confront a truth so unromantic
that it barely qualifies as content: none of our life narratives are about to
change in any significant way. Unless something catastrophic intervenes. You
dying. An immediate family member dying. A global war. Another pandemic. Short
of these minor inconveniences, the story will trudge on obediently. We will
continue to make the same memories, carefully preserving the ones that flatter
us and quietly deleting the ones that require accountability. We will ignore
the same people - not loudly, not dramatically, but with the sophisticated
silence of unread messages and “how are you” conversations that will
never again be opened. Ignoring, after all, has become a skill, refined by
platforms designed to make absence look accidental. But we will not let these
people go entirely. That would be inefficient. Instead, we will keep them in
back pockets - folded neatly into the narrative like emergency tools. Not needed
now, but too useful to discard. Old friends, former intimates, professional
allies, emotional stand-ins. People preserved not for who they are, but for the
role they might be asked to play if the storyline suddenly requires
warmth, validation, memory, or credibility. These back-pocket humans will
remain just close enough to be summoned, but never close enough to really matter. Their presence will be conditional, their relevance activated only
when the narrative experiences a temporary gap. They exist as narrative convenience - emotional
insurance policies against loneliness, boredom, or a sudden need to feel known.
Meanwhile, we will pursue new connections with cautious enthusiasm, fully aware
that they too are being auditioned rather than embraced. We will smile,
exchange histories, promise continuity, all while internally assessing how
expendable they might become when the plot shifts. We will do the same work,
chase the same upgrades, declare the same ambitions with renewed annual
optimism. This year will be different, we will insist - despite a decade of
empirical evidence to the contrary. But ritual matters, even when belief has
expired. We will suddenly elevate certain relationships to “top priority”
status, investing in them with theatrical intensity, while efficiently erasing
decades of shared experience elsewhere. Memory, like bandwidth, must be
allocated strategically. For those of us well past the age where reinvention is
anything more than cosmetic, change will arrive as a mild variation on familiar
patterns. Same life, different arrangement. Fewer illusions. In the end, what
will matter most is whether the fundamental human need - to be needed, not merely
tolerated or stored - finds fulfillment. For most people, it won’t. Not really.
Not sustainably. So the realistic goal is modest: a serviceable collection of
memories. Enough to suggest a life was lived. Enough to distract from the
realization that we were often optional characters in other people’s
stories - kept close enough to call, far enough to ignore. And perhaps that is
the quiet, unspoken truth beneath all those cheerful digital wishes: not that a
new chapter is beginning, but that the old one will continue - with the same
cast, the same omissions, and the same carefully maintained back pockets. And it then comes down to what Whodini calls friends, "
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