Your Lost AirPods Have Something to Say
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Did you know that Napoleon was the first one to come up with the idea of “lost and found”?
"Where do things go when they are lost? I think there's a big, constantly changing pile of things that are lost. Where is that pile? In heaven, of course." If George Carlin’s theory was true, there were a less total of requiems for all the things we have lost, since they’d be in a better place than our negligent and distracted attention.
Since the beginning of humanity, we've been losing things - some of which have been sucked into a giant abyss, never to be seen again. Some, however, have miraculously reappeared. It forms a bizarre glitch in our routine. Because we end up letting go of whatever we're juggling and dedicate all of our attention and effort to finding an essential but boring item, like our keys. What happens to our brain when we're sure we left the lighter on the table, or we swear we put the lipstick inside our bag, or confident that the last time we saw the remote was on the sofa.
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