
I was playing trivia with friends recently, and one of the answers was “spork.” I got the answer wrong, but it immediately sent me into a memory, which I then shared with a friend.
I remembered the first time I ever heard an episode of This American Life. I was in a large van full of college students driving home from an annual ski trip. One of the students had just discovered the show and played an episode for all of us. At the time, it still felt relatively new nationally.
The episode involved spending time with the staff of the satirical publication The Onion and listening to them pitch joke headlines to one another. At one point, a writer stood in front of the group and read this headline aloud:
“Man Uses Spork as Knife.”
It completely bombed.
The writer thought it was so funny, and honestly, I do, too. I mean, a knife! It’s the one thing it isn’t.
As my friend and I were laughing about this memory, we started asking ourselves what it would be like to go back and watch twenty minutes of our lives from that time. Just to observe the conversations happening in that van.
“I bet we were so cute,” I said.
And honestly, I think we probably were.
Of course, it would be fun to revisit milestone moments in our lives. But I found myself thinking that maybe the most meaningful scenes to revisit would not be the landmark moments, but the ordinary and simple ones — long drives, inside jokes, wandering conversations, stopping for snacks, sitting around waiting for something to begin.
And then I had another thought:
Aren’t we living inside moments like that right now?
Maybe twenty years from now, I would love to revisit twenty minutes of my present life. Not because anything extraordinary happened, but because this, too, held lovely moments.
I think that’s a reminder to pay attention.
—Renee Roederer















