Our Times 2015 -

Our Times 2015 -

If you had to draw a line in the sand for when the 21st century truly began to feel like a distinct, chaotic era, 2015 is a strong candidate. Before that, we were still lingering in the transition from analog to digital. After 2015, the world shifted into overdrive. These are our times: an age of breathtaking acceleration and deep, pervasive anxiety.

The defining feature of our era is the total saturation of digital life. 2015 was the year smartphones became ubiquitous, Instagram redesigned its icon, and the "like" button began to shape human self-esteem. Since then, we’ve moved from social media as a pastime to social media as an ecosystem. Algorithms evolved from showing us what we wanted to see to showing us what would keep us enraged, addicted, and scrolling. The phrase "post-truth" was coined. Deep fakes, AI-generated art, and large language models (ChatGPT, Gemini) have blurred the line between human and machine creation. We are the first generation to ask, "Did a robot write this?" our times 2015

Socially, our times have been a long, hard reckoning. The #MeToo movement (exploding in 2017) tore down powerful men and forced a global conversation about consent and power. The murder of George Floyd in 2020 sparked the largest civil rights protests in U.S. history. Meanwhile, the nature of work has shattered. The "Great Resignation," remote work, and the "gig economy" have untethered labor from the office but also from security. We are more connected via Zoom yet more isolated than ever—the Surgeon General called loneliness an epidemic. If you had to draw a line in

Our times are also defined by a new relationship with the future. For previous generations, the future was a promise. For us, it’s a source of dread. The summer of 2015 was one of the hottest on record then; now, every summer breaks that record. Wildfire smoke turns skies orange in New York. Floods deluge Pakistan. We’ve learned new vocabulary: atmospheric river , heat dome , zombie fire . Young people don’t just learn about climate change; they metabolize it as eco-anxiety, a low-grade grief for a planet we’re watching transform in real-time. These are our times: an age of breathtaking

If historians write about this period, they will call it the Great Acceleration —a time when technology outran wisdom, when the speed of change broke the machinery of social trust, and when a species with unprecedented power struggled to build a future it could believe in. We are not the heroes or the villains of this story. We are the ones living inside the question mark, between the old world that died around 2015 and the new one that hasn’t yet been born.