The mechanical keyboard under my fingertips feels colder than usual tonight, a tactile reminder that I have been sitting still for far too long. On the primary monitor, the progress bar for the export is a thin, neon-blue line that has decided to give up on its dreams at exactly 94%. It is the digital equivalent of a heart skip, a pause in a symphony that was never meant to have a rest. As a closed captioning specialist, my entire existence is dictated by the precise timing of symbols and the rhythmic pacing of human speech, yet here I am, trapped in the one space where timing does not exist: the buffer.
The Digital Limbo
Nova B. is the name on my tax forms, but in this dark room, I am more of a ghost in the machine. I spend my days capturing the sighs, the stammers, and the [Unintelligible] whispers of people I will never meet. I create the bridge for those who cannot hear, but tonight, the bridge is out. The video I am working on-a 44-minute deep dive into the architecture of brutalist cathedrals-is suspended in a state of data-limbo. I have hit the refresh button 4 times. Each time, the result is the same: the spinning wheel of death, a tiny, 74-pixel circle that mocks my need for completion. It is a specific kind of torture, watching that 94% sit there, refusing to become 104% (or even 95%), a stubborn refusal of the universe to provide the closure it promised.
The Lie of Perfect Clarity
We are obsessed with the idea that more data, faster streams, and perfect clarity will somehow make our experiences more profound. This is the great lie of the digital age. We think that if we can just eliminate the lag, we will finally understand each other. But as I stare at this frozen frame of a concrete pillar in a French church, I realize that the frustration of the buffer is actually the only honest part of the transaction. The lag is where the reality of the medium exposes itself. We aren’t really watching a documentary; we are watching a sequence of 14-kilobyte packets being shoved through a glass pipe across the ocean. When it stops, the illusion of presence shatters, leaving us alone with our own reflection in the black screen.
“
I remember a mistake I made early in my career, about 234 projects ago. I was captioning a live news broadcast during a storm. The signal was breaking up, the audio a jagged mess of static and vowels. Instead of using the standard [Audio Distortion] tag, I got creative-or perhaps I was just tired. I typed [The Sky is Screaming]. My supervisor didn’t find it as poetic as I did. They wanted accuracy, not interpretation. They wanted the 100%, the clean transcript, the sanitized version of reality where every sound has a designated slot. But the sky *was* screaming. The static was the story. By trying to smooth it out into legible text, I was lying. I was providing a superior aesthetic experience, but I was failing the truth of the moment.
The Silence We Transcribe
[The silence we transcribe is never actually empty.]
This is the core frustration of my work. We are taught to value the signal and ignore the noise, yet the noise is where the humanity lives. When a speaker pauses for 4 seconds, do I label it [Pause] or do I leave the space empty? If I label it, I am telling the viewer how to feel about the silence. If I leave it empty, they might think their speakers have died. We have become so terrified of the gaps that we fill them with metadata, tags, and descriptive text until the original experience is buried under a layer of helpfulness. We are addicted to the stream, to the constant flow of input that tells us we are connected, even when the connection is as thin as a fiber-optic thread.
The Soul’s Hardware
Sometimes the loop is a signal. It’s the psyche’s way of saying the current script is unreadable. When the system crashes for good, or when the habit of watching the buffer becomes the only reality we know, seeking a path like New Beginnings Recovery becomes less about fixing a file and more about rewriting the hardware of the soul. There is a profound dignity in admitting that the data has become corrupted beyond our ability to sync it manually. We try to caption our own lives, adding [Laughter] to scenes where we are crying, and [Upbeat Music] to the moments when we feel the most hollow. We want the transcript to look more refined than the raw footage.
The Invisible Balance
People think my job is about words. It isn’t. It’s about timing. It’s about the 24 frames of a second and where the text lands so it doesn’t obscure the actor’s eyes. If I place a caption too high, I ruin the composition. If I place it too low, it’s cut off by the television’s overscan. It is a delicate balance of 34 different variables, all converging to create an experience that is supposed to be invisible. I am the only professional who prays to remain unseen.
The Concrete Witness
I’ve watched this particular video buffer at 94% for long enough that I have begun to memorize the textures of the stone in the frame. It’s a cathedral in Evry, France. The concrete is cold, grey, and uncompromising. It doesn’t care about my internet connection. It doesn’t care about my deadlines or the 1204 words I still need to caption for the next segment. It just exists. There is something more resonant about that concrete than any of the high-definition footage I’ve processed all week. The concrete doesn’t buffer. It doesn’t need to be synced. It just sits in its own gravity, a silent witness to the frantic buzzing of people like me.
[We are the architects of our own interruptions.]
“
I recall a time when I tried to caption a piece of experimental cinema. It was 74 minutes of a single flickering lightbulb. There was no dialogue. There were no diegetic sounds. My instructions were to provide ‘descriptive audio for the hearing impaired.’ How do you describe the sound of a lightbulb that isn’t making any noise? I spent 4 days on that project. I ended up writing things like [The hum of electricity, imagined] and [A pulse of light that sounds like a heartbeat]. I was lying again. But it was a more effective lie than silence. Or was it? Looking back, I think I should have just left the screen blank. I should have let the viewers sit in the same confusion as the people in the theater. By adding my words, I was stealing their right to be frustrated. I was fixing a problem that didn’t exist.
The Final 1%
Now, the progress bar finally moves. 95%. 96%. 97%. 98%. 99%. It stays there for what feels like 44 years. The tension in my neck reaches a peak. I am holding my breath, waiting for the final 1% to snap into place so I can go back to being a ghost. But as the number finally hits 104% (the software always did have a strange way of calculating totals beyond the expected), and the video begins to play, I feel a strange sense of loss. The moment of presence is over. The documentary resumes. The narrator begins to speak about the ‘spiritual resonance of industrial materials,’ and I start typing, my fingers flying across the keys in a perfect, mindless sync.
[Narrator: The weight of the stone…] |
[Music: Somber cello…]
The Ghost Re-synced
The illusion is back. The bridge is repaired. I am no longer Nova B., the woman in the dark room with the cold coffee. I am the CC button again. I am the ghost. And while the video is superior in its clarity now that the buffering is gone, I can’t help but think that the most important thing I learned all night was during that long, agonizing wait at 94%. It was the only time I wasn’t just transcribing someone else’s life. It was the only time I was actually living mine, even if ‘living’ just meant being angry at a progress bar.