I was sitting in a restaurant tonight when I noticed a young couple at a nearby table.
They were attractive, stylish and looked like the sort of people advertisers use to sell expensive apartments and luxury vacations to upper-middle-class professionals.
But after a while, I realized something strange was happening.
For nearly the entire meal, both of them were focused on taking photographs.
Not casual snapshots. Elaborate productions.
They adjusted lighting. They moved glasses and silverware around on the table. They repositioned plates after the food arrived. They took photographs individually. They took photographs together. They checked the pictures carefully, rejected most of them and started over repeatedly.
Then came the strange part.
The moment they were ready to take the actual photographs of themselves together, both of them suddenly transformed.
They leaned toward each other warmly. Their faces became animated. They smiled with what appeared to be genuine joy and affection. For a few seconds, they looked like one of those impossibly happy couples social media influencers are always pretending to be.
Then the photographs were finished. And the expressions disappeared instantly.
Not gradually. Instantly.
It was like watching actors step out of character after a director yelled “cut.”

I just found out an ex got married – and I’m shocked to feel jealous
Until you ask the right questions, you’ll never find missing answers
Maybe we’re doomed to replay past until we finally get it right
Dead things must be cleared away before rebirth has chance to come
Be afraid, friends: Chicken Little says the sky is falling somewhere
There’s pain in many faces I see, as reality doesn’t match dreams
Taking Donald Trump seriously means ‘Idiocracy’ is already here
How much of what we do is driven by our unconscious social scripts?