He tried to think of something grand—a space odyssey or a sweeping romance—but his mind kept drifting back to his own shelves. They were lined with hard drives, each containing thousands of hours of him eating toast, walking to the post office, and sleeping. He had become so obsessed with recording his life that he had forgotten to actually live one worth telling.
He stood up, grabbed a small digital recorder, and walked onto his balcony. The city was a chaotic tapestry of sirens, distant laughter, and the smell of rain hitting hot asphalt. He saw an old woman sitting on the bench below, feeding pigeons with rhythmic, practiced movements. He saw a young couple arguing over a map, their faces flushed with the thrill of being lost. Oh, God!
He set the recorder down on the railing and walked out his front door, leaving the blinking cursor behind. He didn't know where he was going, and for the first time in twenty years, he didn't care who was watching. He tried to think of something grand—a space
"Oh, God," he whispered, staring at a blinking cursor. For the first time in two decades, he had nothing to say. The prompt on the screen was simple: Develop a story. He stood up, grabbed a small digital recorder,
Arthur sat in his cramped apartment, the blue light of his laptop screen reflecting off his glasses. He was a "life-logger," a man who had spent the last twenty years documenting every mundane second of his existence for a small but dedicated group of online followers.
Arthur looked at his recorder, then at the city. He realized he didn't need to invent a world; he just needed to step into the one that was already happening.