Why does the help center never answer when you need it?
In , Ignatius Sancho wrote a letter to the famous novelist Laurence Sterne. Sancho was a man whose life was a series of improbable victories; born on a slave ship, he had navigated the labyrinth of 18th-century London to become a shopkeeper, a composer, and a man of letters.
He wrote to Sterne to urge him to use his literary fame to dismantle the slave trade. Sterne eventually replied, but many other luminaries of the era did not. To the powerful and the established, Sancho’s inquiries were anomalies. They didn’t have a protocol for a man who shouldn’t, by their economic calculations, have a voice at all.
Their silence wasn’t a lapse in manners; it was a classification. It was a way of saying that the cost of engaging with his reality was higher than the value they assigned to his existence.
We live in a much faster world now, but the architecture of that silence hasn’t changed. It has simply been digitized and rebranded as “Member Support.”
The 9:00 PM Wall
Maya is sitting at her kitchen table at . The house is quiet, except for the occasional, maddening chirp of a smoke detector in the hallway that apparently needs a new battery-a task I performed myself at last