We delete old photos with barely a thought. A few taps, and moments vanish—blurry shots, awkward angles, duplicates from burst mode. But have you ever paused before hitting delete and wondered: what exactly are we discarding?
Not just pixels, surely. That poorly framed sunset still carries the memory of wind on your face, the friend who made you laugh right before you fumbled the shot. The technical failure preserves something the "perfect" photo might miss—the messy reality of being there, of trying and failing to capture something that mattered.
We curate our digital lives with ruthless efficiency. Keep the flattering selfie, delete the rest. Archive the highlights, purge the mundane. We treat memory like a photography portfolio, keeping only what presents well. But what if memory isn't meant to be curated? What if the value of remembering lies not in the quality of individual moments but in their honest accumulation—the awkward alongside the beautiful, the failures with the triumphs?