My name is Viktor Kuznetsov, and I sold my last insurance policy in the spring of 2036. I was sixty-four then, a lifelong agent in Moscow—specializing in the old fears: job loss, medical bankruptcy, market crashes, the quiet terror of “What…
When Abundance Becomes the Norm and Flourishing the Only Pursuit
My name is Elias Bergman, and I have forgotten what “enough” feels like as a question. Not in the careless way of the privileged old world, but in the deep, ordinary way of someone who has lived long enough to see…
The Scarcity Sunset – 2032: When the Last Shortages Fade and a New Era of Plenty Begins
My name is Maria Gonzalez, and I watched the last shortage die on a quiet evening in 2032. I was sixty-nine then, sitting on the balcony of my small apartment in Mexico City, the same one I had lived in for…
When Riches Shift from Accumulation to Generosity
My name is Samuel Okonkwo, and I am one of the richest men in Lagos. Not because I own towers or fleets of vehicles—I don’t. My home is a simple compound in Ikoyi, open to the breeze, with gardens tended by…
2037: When Food, Shelter, and Energy Are as Free as Air and Breath
My name is Rosa Mendoza, and I have not paid for a meal in twelve years. Not out of privilege or luck. Because no one does. I am seventy-five now, living in a small adobe home in the hills outside Oaxaca—walls…
Overflow: When Production Exceeds Desire and Humanity Invents New Purposes
My name is Theo Andersson, and I live in a world that produces more than we can ever want. I am sixty-eight now, in a small house on the Swedish archipelago where the sea is clean again and the nights are…
When Material Constraints Dissolve and Imagination Takes the Wheel
My name is Lila Voss, and in the summer of 2033 I built a house out of dreams. Not metaphorically. Literally. I was forty-eight then, living in a temporary pod in the Swiss Alps while I waited for inspiration to settle….
Universal Plenty: When Abundance Credits Make Survival a Forgotten Concern
My name is Omar Khalil, and I have forgotten what it feels like to worry about tomorrow. Not in the careless way of youth, but in the deep, bone-level way of someone who once knew hunger, eviction, the quiet panic of…
The Post-Need Era: When Basic Wants Vanish and Desire Becomes the Only Driver
My name is Kai Nakamura, and I haven’t wanted for anything basic in over a decade. Not food, not shelter, not health, not safety, not connection—nothing that once defined human need. I am sixty-four now, living in a small ryokan-style home…
The Free Energy World: When Power Becomes Infinite and Societies Run on Endless Plenty
My name is Aisha Rahman, and I remember the day the meter stopped. It was a sweltering afternoon in Dhaka, mid-2031. Our old apartment—shared with my parents, my brother, and his family—had always been a negotiation with electricity: fans rationed during…
When Everything Essential Is Free and Wealth Redefines Itself as Meaning
My name is Elena Petrova, and I threw away my wallet in the spring of 2033. Not dramatically—no bonfire or manifesto. I simply opened the drawer where it had lived for decades, looked at the faded leather filled with cards I…
2030 and Beyond: When Scarcity Ends and Humanity Learns to Live Without Limits
My name is Javier Torres, and I remember the exact moment I realized scarcity was dead. It was a humid morning in Mexico City, late 2030. I was sixty-two, standing in line at the old neighborhood market—habit more than need—when my…
When Success Is Measured by Inner Fulfillment Rather Than External Achievement
My name is Lena Hartmann, and I am considered one of the most successful people in my circle. Not because I built empires or amassed accolades. I haven’t published books, led companies, or gone viral with creations. My name isn’t known…
Purpose Portfolio: When Identity Comes from Curated Passions, Not Job Titles
My name is Sofia Larsson, and when people ask who I am, I no longer say “I was a lawyer” or “I am a teacher.” I say, “Let me show you my portfolio.” It isn’t a résumé. It’s a living tapestry—curated…
Unforced Labor: When Humans Work Only on What Feels Like Play and Machines Handle the Rest
My name is Diego Morales, and I haven’t done a single task that felt like “work” in over a decade. I wake each morning in my small house on the Yucatán coast, the sound of waves a constant companion. Some days…
When Learning Becomes a Lifelong Hobby and Mastery the Only Credential
My name is Amrita Desai, and at seventy-nine I am finally learning to play the sitar. Not as a retirement whim or to check a box. As a deep, unhurried dive into a skill that has called me since childhood. I…
Nomad – 2034: When People Wander Between Intense Collaborations with Long Pauses In Between
My name is Ronan Kelley, and I have no fixed address. Not out of restlessness or misfortune. Out of design. I am fifty-three now, a Project Nomad—someone who wanders between intense collaborations, with long, deliberate pauses in between. My current “home”…
Optional Contribution: When Work Is a Gift You Offer When Moved, Not a Duty You Owe
My name is Elias Fernández, and I haven’t “worked” in the old sense for eight years. Yet I have never felt more useful. I am sixty-five now, living in a small stone cottage on the Andalusian coast where the light is…
Flow State Economy: When Societies Reward Deep Focus and Creativity Over Hours Logged
My name is Aria Singh, and I haven’t checked the time in years. Not because I’m disorganized. Because time no longer measures worth. I am forty-nine, living in a quiet studio in the hills outside Bangalore, surrounded by coffee plants I…
The End of Careers: When Professional Paths Dissolve and Lives Become Tapestries of Chosen Pursuits
My name is Lila Moreau, and I have no career. I haven’t had one since 2032, when the last threads of my old professional path quietly unraveled. I was forty-one then, a senior curator at a prestigious museum in Paris—twenty years…
The Mastery Season: When People Dedicate Years to One Skill Purely for the Joy of Excellence
My name is Kenji Yamamoto, and I have spent the last seven years learning to make knives. Not as a profession—there is no market pressure, no need to sell. Just the quiet, obsessive pursuit of excellence in one narrow craft: forging…
When Employment Becomes Truly Voluntary and Society Celebrates Non-Work
My name is Freja Nielsen, and I have a zero-hour contract with the world. That is not a joke. It is the most common employment status now. I am forty-seven, living in a small wooden house on the edge of a…
Contribution Constellation: When Lives Are Built from Scattered Projects Rather Than Linear Careers
My name is Nadia Petrova, and my life looks like a star map. Not a straight line from school to career to retirement, but a constellation: bright points of intense projects scattered across decades, connected by vast spaces of quiet becoming….
The Inspiration Burst: When Work Happens Only in Short, Passion-Driven Waves
My name is Theo Valdez, and I haven’t had a steady job in twelve years. I’ve had thirty-seven projects instead. I’m fifty-one now, living in a light-filled loft in Barcelona with windows that open to the Mediterranean breeze. My “work” comes…
When Robots Work Tirelessly and Humans Work Only When Inspired
My name is Marcus Hale, and I haven’t punched a clock since 2029. I used to be a shift supervisor at a distribution center outside Chicago—twelve-hour nights, weekends, holidays, the constant pressure of quotas and staffing shortages. I measured my life…