I've been seeing these AI generated videos of famous people who have died side by side from when they were young and how they looked just before they died. It is pretty eerie. So I asked ChatGPT to humor me and create some stills of the young and old me facing off.
It illustrates this phenomenon I think many of us experience as we age. In our heads we still look like whatever age we were before the mirror started lying to us. There comes a point when looking into the mirror is like looking at a stranger.
I find myself projecting that onto famous people I remember from their early days. Social media cruelly exploits showcasing the ravages of time on them. It is startling how unrecognizable some people are when they have aged. It is much more noticeable when you are familiar with what they looked like then and see them now. It is less noticeable with people you see on a regular basis. You only notice the difference when old photos pop up.
I fell into the trap at one point of wanting to show people I work with (especially the younger ones) that I was once young and energetic, too. I remember this one point when we were celebrating a milestone of may five or so years of when the company I work for was founded. They had found a video I was in promoting the project, probably in the early 1990s. I had long hair and was skinny and as handsome as I was ever to be. The audience freaked out. The CEO at the time remarked that I was pretty good looking back then and I remember responding, "I still am." But this voice inside me knew that wasn't true. But I got something out of people being amazed at what the young me looked like.
I tried recreating that moment at one of my team staff meetings years later. I wrote about it here. I was doing a funny retrospect of my life. It was met with awkward silence and uncomfortable glances at the clock. It was an epiphany for me that no one cares what I looked like then or now. I'm not a famous actor. Even my own children just laughed at photos of me from my school days when I tried sharing them with them.
Still, it is interesting to me to challenge ChatGPT to resurrect the young me from the smattering of photos I have.
I do it now out of artistic and philosophical exploration because I know no one else actually gives a shit what I looked like then or now.
I find it vaguely sad when I browse thrift stores in my archeological digs through vintage treasures and pass through the areas full of old frames people have donated. Though most are empty frames some contain baby photos, family photos, photos of couples, studio portraits and photos of what were important events in someone's life. I image how they made it to the thrift stores...divorces, chaotic moves and in many cases deaths of people with no one left who cared about photos of their lives.
In the meantime, I'll continue to stare my aging self in the face and look for meaning.
































