The Mirror of Panic
The cursor blinks at a frequency of 64 beats per minute, which is exactly 14 beats slower than my resting heart rate was during the meeting this morning. I am staring at a diagnostic terminal that tells me, with 94% certainty, that my current levels of cortisol will lead to a localized inflammatory response by Thursday. This is what we do at the firm. We audit the predictions. We look at the black boxes and ask them why they think a twenty-four-year-old developer in Jakarta is going to quit their job because they started buying a specific brand of sparkling water. I am Luna J.-P., and I am currently failing to audit my own life because I spent the last 144 minutes googling why the back of my neck feels like it’s being pinched by a very small, very determined ghost.
It turns out that search engines don’t give you answers; they give you a mirror of your own panic, reflecting back a thousand possibilities that all end in the same catastrophic silence. My screen is a graveyard of open tabs, each one a different way the world might end for me.
The Value of Smudges
I remember my grandmother had this physical photo album, a heavy, leather-bound thing that smelled of cedar and old adhesive. There were photos in there where the exposure was so bad you couldn’t tell if it was a person or a tree, and she loved those the most. She’d point at a blurry smudge and say, ‘That was the day we got lost in the rain.’
The algorithm would have deleted that photo. It would have flagged it as low-quality, a failure of the sensor, a waste of 4 megabytes. But that smudge was the only thing that mattered because it was the only part of the day the camera couldn’t categorize. We are losing our smudges. We are being sharpened until there is nothing left but the edges. I find myself looking for the errors now. In my audits, I look for the 44 people who didn’t follow the trend. I want to know why they didn’t buy the shoes. I want to know why they stayed in the house when the weather was perfect. Those are the only people who feel real to me anymore.
Auditing the Deviants (Focusing on the Uncategorized)
95.6%
Trend
4.4%
Smudge
15%
Doubt
Logistics of Rebellion
I walked out onto my balcony just to breathe something that wasn’t filtered by the office HVAC. Down in the alley, I saw a courier drop a package on my neighbor’s doorstep. It was a small, nondescript box, likely just another automated replenishment of a life lived by proxy. I thought about the sheer volume of things we move across the planet just to satisfy a fleeting impulse that was probably planted in our brains by a targeted ad 24 hours ago.
There’s something strangely grounding about physical logistics, though. Even if the order was placed by a bot, a human still has to carry it. I noticed the neighbor came out to grab a delivery of an
Auspost Vape package, a small silver foil glinting in the afternoon sun, a reminder that people still have habits that the health-tracking apps haven’t quite managed to legislate out of existence. It’s a tiny rebellion, I suppose. Choosing a vice that the sensors flag as a negative variable. I felt a weird surge of solidarity with that stranger. We are all just trying to find a way to breathe that isn’t dictated by a productivity metric.
“
The data is a map, but the map is not the territory; it’s just the ink we spilled while trying to find our way home.
– Internal Audit Note
Quantifying Whim
Yesterday, I filed a report suggesting that the predictive model for urban transit was flawed because it didn’t account for ‘whim.’ My supervisor, a man who once told me his favorite color was ‘efficient,’ looked at me like I had started speaking in tongues. He asked for the data points on whim. I told him there are no data points for whim, that’s the whole point. A whim is what happens when you decide to walk 34 blocks in the wrong direction because you saw a cat that looked like it knew a secret.
He told me to go back to my desk and find a way to quantify the cat. I spent 104 minutes trying to do it before I realized I was part of the problem. I am the one sharpening the edges. I am the auditor of the soul’s glitches, and my job is to make sure the glitches stop happening. It’s a paycheck, I tell myself, but every time I fix a ‘bias’ in the system, I feel like I’m smoothing over a wrinkle in a face that was more beautiful for having lived through the stress.
The Audit Cycle: Reflection and Recalibration
Dream State (Glass)
Covered in 1444 digits, pupil scratched with a ‘3’.
The Digital Cage
Top search result is an ad for accounting software. Relentless categorization.
The Honest Flip
Flipped variable: Poverty read as fiscal responsibility for 24 minutes. 14 families approved.
The Cold Machine
We are obsessed with the idea that we can solve humanity if we just have enough processing power. We think that if we can map every neuron and every purchase and every heartbeat, we will finally understand why we are unhappy. But the unhappiness is the point. The friction is where the heat comes from. If you remove the friction, you don’t get a perfect machine; you get a cold one.
The Calculation of Conclusion
Fastest Route Home
Overflowing Fountain Park
I’m going to turn off my phone so the GPS can’t track my ‘anomalous stationary period.’ I’m going to be a ghost for an hour. I want to see if the world still exists when I’m not being measured. I want to know if I still exist. I’ll leave the audit for Monday. Let the machine wonder where I went. Let it try to calculate the probability of a woman disappearing into the twilight just because she felt like it. The answer is zero, and that’s why the answer is beautiful.
Is it possible to be both the auditor and the anomaly?
ZERO
…and that’s why it’s beautiful.
