I recently came across a question that stopped me in my tracks, which honestly does not happen often enough anymore. It was simple on the surface: if you were putting together a time capsule to be opened in the year 2200, what three items would you choose to represent your life or the world right now?
I sat with that for a minute. Maybe longer than I should admit.
Here is what I landed on, and why I think it says more about 2026 than I expected.
Pick One: A Conversation With an AI
My first pick was a screenshot of a conversation between a human and an AI. I know, I know. AI is one of the most polarizing topics going right now, and I get it. There are real concerns worth having about what this technology means for jobs, creativity, and the future. I am not here to dismiss any of that.
But here is the thing: like it or not, AI has become a genuine part of everyday life. As of early 2026, surveys show that roughly half of US workers now use AI on the job in some form, and the share who say it has meaningfully changed how they work keeps climbing every quarter (per Gallup’s workplace research). That is not a fringe trend. That is a quiet, fast shift happening in nearly every office, classroom, and living room.
I think people 200 years from now will look back on this moment the way we look back at the first telephone or the first home computer. We are right in the middle of it, all of us figuring it out in real time, debating it at dinner tables and in comment sections. (It’s not so different from how I get pulled into a hyperfixation honestly, just on a much bigger cultural scale.) I wanted that moment in the capsule. Not to celebrate it uncritically, just to say: this was happening, and here is what it actually looked like while it was still new and messy and unresolved.
Pick Two: A Pair of Cheap Wireless Earbuds
My second pick was a cheap pair of wireless earbuds, the kind you can grab at any checkout counter.
Because in 2026, almost every person you pass on the street is carrying their entire music library in their ears, available instantly, all the time. We have fully normalized something genuinely extraordinary: the ability to summon any song ever recorded in about three seconds, or to disappear into total silence in the middle of a crowded room.
Future people opening that capsule might find those little earbuds adorable, like finding a Walkman or a flip phone. Or they might find them surprisingly familiar. Either way, they feel like a perfect, unglamorous artifact of right now.
Pick Three: A Seed
My third pick was a seed. Something ordinary, like a sunflower or a tomato.
Because for all the technology and all the noise, people in 2026 are still doing what humans have done for thousands of years: putting something tiny in the dirt and hoping it grows. There is something grounding about that, something that connects this moment to the deep past instead of just the future.
It also turns out I am in good company here. The famous 1939 Westinghouse time capsule, buried at the New York World’s Fair and not meant to be opened until the year 6939, included a vial of seeds right alongside the newsreels and the electric razor. Apparently I am not the only one who thinks a seed belongs next to the technology of the moment. And depending on how the climate story unfolds over the next two centuries, a seed from 2026 might end up carrying more weight than we realize.
The Old and the New, Sharing a Box
What I love about this question is how much it made me think about the tension we are all living inside right now. The ancient and the brand new sitting right next to each other. A seed and an AI screenshot, sharing the same box, both trying to say something true about who we were.
So I am turning it over to you. If you had to choose three things to represent your life or the world in 2026, what would they be? Drop them in the comments. I genuinely want to know.

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