Embracing Life's Impermanence
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The other week, I dove deep into a history rabbit hole and stumbled upon a black-and-white silent film from 1900.
(Yes, films existed back then—thank you, Louis Le Prince, for your 1888 invention).
Watching this century-old film, I was struck by how the absence of sound made me notice every little detail.
As I watched, I realized that the people in this film had never experienced radio, movies, automobiles, or electronics.
They lived in a world vastly different from ours, where the United States was still stitching itself together with 50,000 miles of railroads.
And then it hit me—everyone in this film is long gone.
Their struggles, triumphs, wars, lessons, achievements, and memories vanished with them.