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When sharing becomes effortless, are we still asking who agreed, who is seen, and what remains private in a world where moments no longer stay within their original circle?

Kalyani Srinath, a food curator at www.sizzlingtastebuds.com, is a curious learner and a keen observer of life.
April 4, 2026 at 8:39 AM IST
Consent is something most people recognise when it is spelled out. It shows up in forms, signatures, checkboxes. Marriage needs it. Medical procedures require it. Financial and personal data are tied to it. The idea is straightforward. You agree before something is done in your name.
Outside those formal spaces, though, consent becomes less visible. Not absent, just blurred.
Think about how often lives are shared now. A quick photograph at a family lunch. A video from a school function. A moment that feels too nice not to post. It takes seconds. It feels harmless. Sometimes it even feels expected.
But somewhere in that ease sits a quiet question. Who really agreed to this?
Children appear in many of these moments. Their faces, their names, their small, unfiltered lives. Shared before they know what sharing means. A baby laughing, a child asleep, a teenager mid-expression, unaware. These are ordinary moments, the kind families have always held onto.
Only now they are not held. They are displayed.
Is that the same thing?
Perhaps it feels like an extension of old habits. Families have always shown photographs, told stories, laughed over memories. But those moments once had edges. A room, a gathering, a circle of familiarity. Now the edges are harder to see.
And then there is time. A child grows up. Would they recognise themselves in what was shared? Would they have chosen the same moments?
There is no easy way to ask them in advance.
The same quiet assumptions appear elsewhere too. A workshop, a classroom, a casual group activity. Someone takes out a phone. A picture is taken, sometimes several. It is meant to capture energy, participation, a sense of community.
But does everyone in that frame know where it might end up?
These are small moments. Easy to overlook. Yet they repeat often enough to shape a habit. The habit of sharing first, and thinking later, if at all.
Does recording a moment change it slightly? Does it make one step outside it, even briefly?
It is hard to say. But the shift is noticeable. Moments are not only lived, they are arranged, framed, sometimes improved before they are shown. There is a subtle awareness of being seen, even when no one is immediately watching.
It is not always missing. But it can feel thinner.
A difficult piece of news shared in passing. A response that moves quickly to logistics, to planning, to the next step. Efficient, even helpful, but slightly distant.
Is it because people are busier, or just more distracted? Or has the constant flow of updates made each one feel lighter, easier to move past?
Which brings things back, quietly, to consent again.
Not the formal version, but the everyday one. The kind that asks, without making a scene, is this mine to share? Is this someone else’s moment as much as mine? Would they mind, if they could see it the way I do?
What does that mean over time?
A childhood once known only to a few now becomes something that can be revisited, searched, even judged by many. Does that change how it is remembered? Or how it might feel, later, to the person who lived it?
Some things lose nothing by staying within a smaller circle. Some moments carry more meaning when they are not put on display. Not hidden, just held a little closer.
The same might be said for concern and courtesy. They are easy to overlook because they do not demand attention. They show up in small ways. A pause before responding. A question asked without rushing past the answer. A willingness to let someone else set the boundary.
None of this requires a rulebook.
It does not ask for silence or withdrawal. Only a slight shift in attention. A moment’s hesitation before sharing. A second thought before assuming. A brief pause before moving on.
Consent, in this sense, is not just permission. It is awareness.
Concern is not just reaction. It is attention.
Courtesy is not just politeness. It is consideration.
None of them are difficult to understand. Perhaps the harder part is noticing when they quietly slip away.
And once noticed, deciding what to do differently.