So here’s my question to you, reader: have you ever found a file you don’t remember making? A strange name, a strange date, a strange message? Something that felt less like data and more like a message in a bottle from a version of the internet that’s already faded away?
[Your Name] Date: [Today’s Date]
The file wasn’t a journal entry. It wasn’t a letter. It was a list. A list of 47 items, each one stranger than the last: “Gabriela doesn’t like the sound of ice cubes.” “Gabriela learned to drive in a cemetery parking lot.” “Gabriela -2012- only answers if you say her name twice.” “Gabriela’s favorite movie is one that doesn’t exist anymore.” I felt a chill that had nothing to do with the air conditioning. The obvious explanation is that I wrote this. Maybe during a caffeine-fueled creative writing phase? A half-remembered dream I tried to preserve? But I don’t recognize my own voice in the sentences. The cadence is too precise. Too… sad. gabriela -2012-
Or—and this is the rabbit hole my brain lives in now—what if Gabriela was a digital ghost? A transient identity that only existed on leap day 2012, in the space between deleted files and corrupted sectors. A name that the hard drive itself generated, like a glitch in the fabric of the directory. So here’s my question to you, reader: have