She hit "Untag." But the damage was already syndicated. Someone had already screenshotted it. Someone had already sent it to the "Ugly Candid" group chat on BBM. The shame wasn't guilt. Guilt was about doing something bad. Shame was about being something bad. And in 2011, you were what your profile said you were.
That was the secret shame of 2011. Not the mistake itself. But the desperate, algorithmic choreography of trying to delete the mistake while simultaneously curating the proof that you didn't care.
It was a tagged photo. She was mid-laugh, eyes half-closed, a red Solo cup merging with her hand like a tumor. In the background, a boy she liked was talking to another girl. Her own face looked hungry. Desperate. It was a fraction of a second—a shutter speed of 1/60th—but it felt like a mugshot of her soul. shame -2011
She deleted the whole album. Then she wrote a status: "So over drama. Going private. #hatersgonnahate."
The Highlight Reel
She closed the laptop. She opened her flip phone. No texts. She closed the flip phone.
In 2011, shame didn’t live in the town square anymore. It lived in your dorm room, in the pale blue glow of a Nokia N8 or a BlackBerry Curve. It was a silent, vibrating thing. She hit "Untag
She posted it with a black-and-white photo of her staring out a rainy window—a photo she had taken specifically for this purpose, rehearsed in the mirror three times.