Ka Kei Ho.
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Time

Nov 29 '25
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Life
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1 min
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I bought my oldest kid his first watch today.

He loves when we ask what time it is.

He can read the hands, and that alone thrills him. Thrills us too.

My grandmother bought me my first watch and taught me how to read it.

It felt like a special ability, and it was.

It marked the beginning of understanding that at certain hours, certain things would happen: recess, lunch, dinner, my favorite TV show.

Time became a map of anticipation. It also marked the beginning of something else: waiting, running late.

As an adult, the magic of glancing at my wrist to know what comes next got diluted: by my phone, by the clock on my computer, by the time glowing from my car’s dashboard.

Time is everywhere now. Less a map than a meter running.

But watching my son discover it fresh, I remember what it felt like when time first became visible, before it became visible everywhere, before it started measuring me back.

I’m handing him a gift that will one day feel like a leash.

That’s the job.

Context

I started this blog as a kid and have redesigned it many times over the years. I've never been able to let it go—I think it's because it feels like my memory of growing with the internet turned into a living thing.

By January 1st, 2027, this blog will have 365 new photos and 52 new posts.

I want to live more intentionally. Enough to find something worth photographing each day.

I want to reflect more deeply. Enough to write something meaningful each week.