You were there.
So why can't you remember it?
A conversation. A journey. An afternoon with someone you love. The event happened. Yet something about it never fully arrived. Years later, you remember the schedule, the location, the facts. But the experience itself feels strangely absent.
In Presence Debt, philosopher and essayist Sal Oldport explores the hidden cost of living elsewhere while life is happening.
Building on the ideas introduced in The Missing Room, this second volume of the Deep Focus series investigates how attention shapes experience, identity, and memory-and what happens when those processes quietly break down.
Drawing from psychology, philosophy, contemplative traditions, and everyday life, Oldport develops a powerful framework for understanding why modern people often feel informed, connected, and productive while simultaneously experiencing a growing sense of absence.
This is not a book about productivity.
It is not a book about technology.
It is a book about the invisible debt that accumulates when life is repeatedly lived somewhere other than where it occurs.
Inside you'll discover:
• Why experience and memory are not the same thing
• How intelligent machines reveal patterns that existed before they arrived
• What contemplative traditions understood about attention long before neuroscience
• Why many forms of distraction are structural rather than personal failures
• How the measurable can quietly replace the meaningful
• Why presence may be one of the most valuable human capacities of the twenty-first century
Presence Debt is the second volume of the Deep Focus series.
A philosophical exploration of attention, experience, identity, and the hidden costs of absence.