Saturday, March 28, 2026

You Are Making History Right Now — And Nobody Is Saving It

 Every generation thinks history belongs to kings, presidents, and generals. The people who won wars. The people who built empires. The people whose names ended up in textbooks.


But that's not what history actually is.


History is your grandmother's recipe written on a torn piece of notebook paper. It's the way your neighborhood looked before they tore it down to build a highway. It's the text message you sent your best friend the night something changed your life forever. It's the photo on your phone from a Tuesday afternoon that felt completely ordinary — until that Tuesday became the last one before everything was different.


History is not the story of the powerful. It is the story of all of us. And right now, we are losing most of it.




Think about what gets preserved from 100 years ago. Letters from wealthy families. Photographs from people who could afford cameras. Diaries from the educated. The records of institutions, governments, and corporations.


The butcher on the corner. The woman who raised six kids alone after her husband died in a factory accident. The teenager who had big dreams and a small bedroom. Their lives happened. They mattered. But almost nothing survives to tell their story.


We are about to make the same mistake again — except this time we have no excuse.


For the first time in human history, ordinary people have the tools to document everything. Smartphones. Cloud storage. Social media. We are generating more personal data in a single day than our great-grandparents created in a lifetime.


And most of it will disappear.


Not because we don't care. But because nobody built a system to save it.




When a company shuts down, your photos go with it. When a phone breaks without a backup, years of memories are gone in a second. When someone dies without a plan, their entire digital life — the messages, the videos, the voice recordings — vanishes within months as accounts get deactivated and storage expires.


Future historians will look back at our era and find a strange gap. They will have more records from 1920 than from 2020 in many cases, because physical photographs survived in shoeboxes while digital ones died with a forgotten password.


This is not inevitable. It is a choice we are making by doing nothing.




Every single person alive today is living through history. The rise of artificial intelligence. A global pandemic. Economic upheaval. Political transformation. Climate change playing out in real time.


Your experience of these events is part of the record. What it felt like to live through it. What your neighborhood looked like. What you were worried about at 2am. What made you laugh during the hardest years.


That is not trivial. That is the texture of history. That is exactly what gets lost when only the powerful get to tell the story.


You deserve to be part of the record. Your family deserves to be remembered. Your life deserves to survive you.


The question is whether we build the systems to make that possible — or let another generation of ordinary lives disappear into silence.




Robert Lee Beers III is a writer, technologist, and digital preservation advocate based in South Carolina. He believes that preserving everyday life is one of the most important things we can do for future generations.