Add Silicon Canals to your Google News feed. ![]()
Here’s the strangest exercise you’ll do today: Imagine your house is on fire and you can only save one photograph.
Got it? Now imagine meeting someone new tomorrow and showing them one photo that captures who you are. I’ll bet you anything those two photos are completely different.
This disconnect fascinated me when I first discovered it.
The photo we’d rescue from flames—maybe that blurry shot of grandma laughing at Christmas or your toddler covered in spaghetti sauce—rarely matches the polished image we’d present to a stranger.
That gap between our private treasures and public displays reveals something profound about the double life we all lead: The one we experience and the one we perform.
I’ve been thinking about this ever since I found myself scrolling through hundreds of photos to post for my two-year anniversary, bypassing all the real moments—him helping me through a panic attack, us exhausted on the couch after work—for that one perfect sunset shot where we both looked good.
The photo I posted got lots of likes. The photos I’d actually save? They’re the messy, imperfect ones nobody else will ever see.
1) Your public photos hide your need for control while your private ones reveal your acceptance of chaos
When we curate images for others, we’re essentially trying to control the narrative. Every carefully selected photo on social media or dating profile represents our attempt to manage how others perceive us.
But the photos we’d save from disaster? They capture life as it actually happened—unfiltered, unposed, unexpected.
Think about the last photo you shared publicly versus the last one that made you genuinely emotional when you stumbled across it.
Joel Sternfeld, a photographer, once said, “You take 35 degrees out of 360 degrees and call it a photo. No individual photo explains anything. That’s what makes photography such a wonderful and problematic medium.”
This perfectly captures why we struggle with this duality.
The photos we share publicly are those carefully chosen 35 degrees—the angle that makes us look successful, happy, put-together. But the photos we treasure privately?
They might show the other 325 degrees of that moment: The mess just outside the frame, the tears we’d just wiped away, the exhaustion we were hiding.
2) You value belonging over achievement in your deepest self
Look at what dominates your social media: Graduations, promotions, vacations, accomplishments. Now think about that photo you’d save from the fire. Is it your diploma? Your award ceremony? Probably not.
It’s more likely that ordinary moment when everyone you loved happened to be in the same room, or that random Tuesday (well, actually it was a Thursday) when your dad taught you to ride a bike.
The photos we display publicly often showcase our individual achievements—look what I did, where I went, what I earned.
But our most precious photos almost always feature other people, even if those people aren’t particularly photogenic or the moment wasn’t particularly special to anyone else.
These images remind us that our deepest satisfaction comes not from what we’ve accomplished alone, but from the connections we’ve made along the way.
3) Your real life happens in transitions, not destinations
Have you noticed how the photos we post are usually endpoints? The summit of the mountain, not the climb. The finished renovation, not the months of living in construction dust.
The wedding day, not the years of building a relationship. But flip through the photos people actually keep in shoeboxes or hidden phone folders, and you’ll find something different entirely.
The most treasured photos often capture transitions: The last day in your childhood home, someone mid-laugh at a joke you can’t remember, the messy kitchen during a holiday cooking marathon.
These in-between moments don’t photograph well for public consumption—they’re too specific, too mundane, too hard to explain. Yet they hold the texture of real life in a way our highlight reels never could.
I have a folder of screenshots from readers who’ve written to me over the years, telling me how something I wrote helped them leave a toxic job or understand their workplace better.
Not exactly Instagram material. But if my laptop caught fire tomorrow, that folder would matter more to me than any professional headshot or byline photo ever could.
4) You’re performing happiness but preserving love
The pressure to appear happy in public photos is immense. Smile for the camera. Look like you’re having fun. Project positivity. But when psychologists study the photos people actually treasure, they find something surprising: Many of them don’t feature smiles at all.
My grandmother, who passed three years ago, left me a box of photos. The ones that destroy me aren’t from her birthday parties or holiday dinners where everyone’s grinning at the camera.
They’re the candid shots: Her concentrating on her crossword, looking tired but content after gardening, that one where she’s mid-eye-roll at something my grandfather said.
Devon Frye noted that “Photos can stir emotions and meaningful reflection.” It’s these unguarded moments that do exactly that—not because they show happiness, but because they show truth.
5) Your curated life suggests abundance while your saved photos reveal scarcity
Scroll through anyone’s public photos and you’ll see abundance: Multiple vacations, endless restaurant meals, new experiences, fresh purchases.
We photograph and share what we have plenty of. But the photos we’d save from a fire? They often capture what we’ve lost or fear losing.
That photo of your childhood dog. Your parents when they were young. A friend you’ve drifted from—which happened to me with my college best friend, teaching me the hard way that friendships need active maintenance, not just shared history.
These aren’t photos we’d typically share because they carry a weight that doesn’t translate to public viewing. They’re reminders of life’s scarcity, not its abundance.
6) You’re documenting experiences publicly but hoarding moments privately
Here’s something wild: We take more photos than ever, but we treasure fewer of them.
We document experiences obsessively—every meal, every sunset, every milestone—but the photos we’d actually save are often accidental captures of ordinary moments that just happened to contain extraordinary meaning.
The disconnect reveals how we’ve split ourselves in two.
There’s the documenting self, constantly recording life for potential sharing, and the experiencing self, who knows that the most meaningful moments often happen when nobody’s thinking about cameras at all.
Your phone might have thousands of photos, but I bet the ones you’d save could fit in a shoebox. And they’re probably not the ones with the most likes.
Final thoughts
The gap between the photo you’d save and the photo you’d share isn’t a character flaw—it’s human nature. We all maintain this split between our performed life and our lived experience.
But recognizing this gap might be the first step toward closing it, even just a little.
What if we occasionally shared the imperfect photo? What if we admitted that our treasured moments rarely photograph well? What if we stopped treating our public and private selves as two different people who never meet?
The next time you’re about to post something, ask yourself: In ten years, will this be a photo I’d save or just one I shared? The answer might surprise you.
And maybe, just maybe, it’ll inspire you to occasionally let others see the life you’re actually living, not just the one you’re performing.
From the editors
Undercurrent — our weekly newsletter. The sharpest writing from Silicon Canals, curated reads from across the web, and an editorial connecting what others cover in isolation. Every Sunday.
Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
















