The Algorithm That Adopted Me
A free‑verse poem about growing up as “content” instead of just a child in front of the camera.

You say
it was just videos.
Just memories,
you tell me,
like home movies
used to be.
But home movies
didn’t have sponsors.
You,
the one behind the camera,
and you,
the thing behind the screen,
turned my childhood
into a playlist.
“Watch next,”
you suggested,
like it wasn’t
my life.
I don’t know
when you started
raising me.
Somewhere between
“like and subscribe”
and
“comment below your favorite part,”
you learned my face
better than I did.
You knew
which angle
made strangers stay,
which thumbnail
made them click,
which version of me
was most worth watching.
Apparently,
it was the one
where I cried.
We never signed
adoption papers,
you and I,
but you still
tucked me in
with ring lights,
kissed my forehead
with notifications,
told me bedtime stories
in view counts
and CPM.
I grew up
on the sound
of your algorithm
refreshing.
Hey,
you.
The one
who set up the tripod,
who said,
“Do that again,
but bigger this time,”
who zoomed in
when I flinched
at the prank
I didn’t know
was coming.
You laughed,
remember?
I learned
that pain
was funnier
in 1080p.
You filmed me
opening presents
I didn’t ask for,
crying over things
I didn’t agree
to share,
blowing out candles
on a birthday
I barely remember
without the jump cut.
I watched it back
more times
than I actually lived it.
Sometimes
I forget
which version
was real.
I used to think
you loved me
because you kept
every moment.
Then I saw
the analytics tab.
Love
doesn’t come
with retention graphs.
The algorithm
was kinder
than you,
sometimes.
At least
it was honest.
It never pretended
I was more
than content.
Just kept saying,
“People like this.
Give them more.”
More tantrums,
more confessions,
more shaky‑voiced
apologies on camera
for things I did
when I was eight.
Do you know
what it’s like
to go viral
for a mistake
you can’t even spell yet?
I searched
my own name
in incognito mode,
as if I could hide
from a childhood
everyone else
had already seen.
I found myself
in compilations,
“Top 10 Funniest
Kid Meltdowns,”
comment sections
arguing
about my personality,
strangers diagnosing me
between ad breaks.
You told me
it was normal.
“This is just
how the internet is.”
As if the internet
tucked me into bed
afterward.
Now,
when I make breakfast,
I do it
without filming.
No overhead shot,
no sped‑up montage
of chopping fruit,
just
cereal,
milk,
silence.
The spoon clinks
against the bowl
and no one
rates the sound.
It feels
like a luxury
I didn’t know
I could afford.
You still send me
clips sometimes.
“Look what popped up
in my memories!”
It’s always
the same girl,
eyes too big
for her face,
holding a sign
she can’t read,
saying words
she didn’t choose.
You write,
“Aww,
you were so little.”
I type,
“I still am,”
and delete it
before I hit send.
The algorithm
has started
to change,
or maybe
I have.
I like videos
about boundaries now,
podcasts
of grown children
talking about
leaving.
I save posts
about privacy,
about consent,
about parents
who choose
to keep
their kids
off camera.
My feed
slowly shifts
from my past
to my possible.
You call it
“weird”
that I don’t want
to vlog
my own life.
You say
I’m wasting
an audience.
You don’t understand
that I am
the audience
now—
finally,
watching myself
with kindness
instead of critique.
There is a version
of this story
where I stay,
keep performing,
turn the ache
into a brand,
make merch
out of my younger self.
You’d love that arc.
Redemption
with affiliate links.
But here,
in this version,
I do something
you never
optimized for.
I stop.
I let a moment
happen
without proof.
I cry
without a camera.
I laugh
and no one
clips it.
I start collecting
memories
that live
only in my body,
not in your
recommended
for you.
You still wait,
of course,
offer me
old footage
like candy,
tempt me
with nostalgia
in HD.
Some nights
I almost click.
But then I picture
that small girl
holding the sign,
and I choose
to hold her
instead.
Maybe
I can’t delete
every frame,
or pull myself
out of every
reaction video,
or scrub my name
from every
search bar.
But I can choose
what I film now.
I can choose
what I don’t.
So here it is,
algorithm,
my one
unsponsored act:
I adopt myself.
I give me back
to me.
And for the first time,
I let this ending
play out
off‑screen.
About the Creator
Anie the Candid Mom Abroad
Hi, nice to meet you. I'm Anie. The anonymous writer trying to make sense of the complicated world, sharing tips and tricks on the life lessons I've learned from simple, ordinary things, and sharing ideas that change me.


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