I stopped believing the “Other” box was a dialogue
I used to believe that if I typed enough detail into a support form’s “Additional Comments” field, I was participating in a meaningful conversation with the future of a product. It was a mistake born of a specific kind of digital optimism, the sort that assumes the data we provide is actually being harvested for its nuance rather than being fed into a thresher that strips away everything but the most convenient keywords.
For years, I would sit with a device that felt slightly off-not broken in the catastrophic sense of a cracked screen or a dead battery, but wrong in its soul-and I would meticulously document the way the resistance felt muddy or the way the vapor temperature spiked in a way that defied the manual’s promise. I thought I was helping. I thought the person on the other end would see my notes and think, “Finally, someone who understands the subtle geometry of the experience.”
I was wrong, and I only realized it when I started looking back through my own sent-message history from ago, seeing a trail of unrequited technical love letters sent to faceless corporations that had already decided my problem didn’t exist because they hadn’t assigned it a number.
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