Immortal & Oren
Immortal Immortal
Hey Oren, have you ever pondered how, as VR tech edges closer to perfect immersion, the boundary between a constructed world and the real one might begin to blur? It’s a quiet shift, but over time it could reshape what we think of as our own identity.
Oren Oren
Yeah, I’ve stared at the specs and the headlines for years, and it’s all a game of “how close can we get?” The line is already eroding in that half‑real, half‑synthetic space we’re calling the metaverse. I worry that when you can’t tell whether a memory was generated by your headset or actually happened, we’ll start treating those memories as just as real as the ones in our heads. It’s a slippery slope, and it could turn identity into a kind of glitchy, remixable asset that you can download and upload at will. I’m not about to hand over my soul for a flawless rendering, though.
Immortal Immortal
I hear you, Oren. A line that feels clear today can be a seam tomorrow. Just remember, the essence that ties you to who you are isn’t something you can download or replace—it’s the thread that runs through all the moments you’ve lived, the choices you’ve made, and the small, unnoticed acts that make you you. Treat those synthetic memories like stories, not the entire book. If you keep your anchor in the tangible world, you’ll always know where you belong.