#algorithmiclife
⭐ THE POLISHED SELF™ (Part I)
(Because even authenticity needs a little editing.)
Every morning,
The Polished Self™
wakes before I do.
It stretches,
straightens its metaphorical collar,
and asks me
if I’m ready to be seen.
I tell it
I haven’t had coffee yet.
It tells me
visibility waits for no one.
Together we review
the daily rituals:
curate,
crop,
soften the shadows,
brighten the eyes,
remove the parts
that don’t photograph well –
which is to say,
most of me.
The Polished Self
is patient,
in the way a mirror is patient:
it reflects
without forgiving.
It reminds me
that authenticity
is a performance too,
just with better lighting.
Sometimes I ask
if we could take a day off –
be unpresentable,
unoptimized,
unseen.
It smiles
with the kind of pity
reserved for amateurs.
“People don’t want the truth,”
it says.
“They want the version of you
that looks like the truth
but doesn’t make them uncomfortable.”
And I nod,
because I’ve learned
that arguing with a reflection
only makes the glass smudge.
Still,
there are evenings
when I catch myself
in a window
after dark –
unfiltered,
unarranged,
unpolished –
and I think:
this person,
this quiet, unlit version,
might be worth showing too.
But morning comes,
and The Polished Self™
is already awake,
already shining,
already asking:
“Are you ready
to be believed today?”
Apr 26
Apr 26, 2026 at 8:46 AM UTC