Since You Arrived

2 min read Original article ↗

Every figure here comes from a real source. A few come with honest footnotes. We owe you both.

  • Children were born · Humans left

    The UN counts roughly 132 million arrivals and 63 million departures a year. The arithmetic of it is, we admit, unsettling.

  • Hands were held, somewhere

    Unsourced · Included on purpose

    Nobody counts this. We estimated it the way anyone would: by wanting it to be true. If it comforts you, the number is almost certainly too low.

  • Songs were heard, somewhere

    About seven trillion streams a year, which is 222,000 a second, which is a lot of people being moved at once, quietly, in different rooms.

  • Meals were prepared and shared

    Not every meal is shared. We're using "shared" loosely, and a little wishfully.

  • Pages were turned, cover toward close

    This one required some arithmetic. We counted active readers, average pace, time zones. The result feels right. The result may not be right.

  • Dollars were spent on war

    $2.887 trillion in 2025. Another record, up 6.1% in real terms. The eleventh consecutive year of growth. Europe rose 14%; Asia and Oceania rose 8.1%, the largest annual rise since 2009. The number went up. We expected that. We did not stop expecting it.

  • Tons of carbon joined the air

    38.1 gigatons in 2025. Also a record. Records, on this side of the ledger, tend to be the wrong kind.

  • Questions were asked of AI, not people

    By February 2026 it was closer to 3 billion. By the time you read this, higher still. The number is chasing itself. We are using the last one that was actually counted.

  • A species vanished

    Roughly one species per hour. The exact rate is debated, and we understand the impulse to debate it. The direction is not in dispute.

  • A sister piece

    What Color Was The Sky asks a similar question about yesterday's light, reconstructed from atmospheric data. Vol. II of what is now, apparently, a series.