absurd.email · an essay
"There is but one truly serious philosophical problem, and that is the inbox." after Camus, more or less
A man wakes. Before coffee, before the light has fully committed to the room, he reaches for a small glass rectangle and learns that nine new things require him. He did not ask for them. He does not want them. He will answer four, archive three, and carry the remaining two in his chest for the rest of the day like small stones.
The absurd is not the email itself. Email is merely text, and text is innocent. The absurd is the collision: on one side, our deep and human longing for an empty inbox; on the other, the great indifferent abundance of the inbox itself.1 Neither will yield. The longing is incurable. The abundance is renewable. Between them, a person, refreshing.
The gods condemned Sisyphus to roll a boulder to the top of a mountain, from which it would roll back down of its own weight, forever. The gods clearly had email in mind. They simply lacked the infrastructure.
Picture him now, our absurd hero, at six in the evening. He archives the final message. The list is empty. The white of the screen is the white of summit snow. He stands at zero, and for one entire moment nothing on earth is owed by him to anyone.
And each morning the boulder is back at the foot of the mountain: the newsletters,2 the receipts, the gentle bumps, the reply-all that should never have been born and yet was, and lived, and multiplied. He descends. He begins again. One must imagine Sisyphus at inbox zero.
The ordinary man, faced with the absurd, attempts escape. He builds folders. He writes rules. He erects a small bureaucracy inside his own correspondence and appoints himself its only clerk. It does not work, and this is important: it was never going to work, and he half knew, and he built it anyway.
Folders are not hope. Folders are scorn with a label. The absurd man does not unsubscribe out of hope that less will arrive. He unsubscribes the way a stone declines an opinion: completely, and without expecting it to matter.3
There are those who, one ordinary Tuesday, declare email bankruptcy. Select all. Archive. Begin again at zero, unearned. This is the leap, and it is philosophical suicide: the inbox is not emptied, it is denied. The stones are still in the field; the man has merely closed his eyes and called the field clear.
We do not judge him. The leap is human. We note only that the boulder does not take it personally, and is already on its way back down.
I leave Sisyphus at the foot of the mountain, thumb hovering, list full. His burden is renewable, his summit momentary, his cause lost in advance. He knows all of this. It is precisely why his heart, against every reasonable projection, is light.
The struggle itself toward zero is enough to fill a man's heart. One must imagine him at inbox zero, which is to say: one must imagine, for he will not stay there, and neither, dear reader, will you. Something has arrived while you were reading this. You can feel it. Go and see.
footnotes unread: you tell us