As they climbed down the rickety bamboo scaffolding, a familiar sound echoed from a nearby warung . A man was watching a political debate on a crackling TV. The anchor was yelling about the rupiah. Zky didn’t flinch. His reality wasn’t the news; it was the algorithm.
As Agus went to buy three iced coffees in plastic pouches (the 90s nostalgia was hitting hard), a sudden rain began to pour. The tropical kind that doesn’t ask permission. The crowd didn't run for cover. Instead, they pulled out clear umbrellas—a trend started by a K-pop idol last month—and kept filming. The rain became a filter.
Zky spotted a girl wearing a kebaya (traditional blouse) but made of clear plastic, with combat boots. She was live-streaming herself eating kolak (sweet potato dessert) while discussing stoicism. The comments scrolled by in a blur of hearts and fire emojis.
Rizky, known online as “Zky.x,” adjusted the gimbal on his smartphone. His shirt was a vintage Pixies band tee he’d bought for three dollars at a thrift store in Bandung, tucked loosely into wide, billowing pants that swallowed his sneakers. He wasn’t a punk. He wasn’t a hipster. He was anak kekinian —a child of the now. As they climbed down the rickety bamboo scaffolding,
Mona pulled her hood up, protecting her tablet. She looked at the chaotic, beautiful mess around her. The concrete, the neon, the adzan (call to prayer) echoing faintly from a distant mosque, fighting for space with a remix of a Sabrina Carpenter song.
“Did you see the challenge?” Zky asked, hopping onto Agus’s ojek bike. “The #RameDiRelawan? My friend Dita got 2 million views for her ‘quiet quitting’ rant.”
They stood in a triangle, three kids on an island of asphalt, scrolling through their phones to see what the rest of the world was doing. But for a brief moment, they put the phones down. They listened to the rain hit the plastic umbrellas. They watched the steam rise from the hot kolak . Zky didn’t flinch
Mona rolled her eyes, straddling the back of the bike. “Quiet quitting a volunteer gig is so ‘last year.’ The new vibe is ‘nrimo’ but make it luxury.”
His companion, Mona, snorted. She was sketching the skyline on a beat-up tablet, her stylus moving in furious, precise strokes. She wore a modest jilbab in lavender, but her makeup was sharp—a graphic white eyeliner wing that looked like a digital glitch. “The grunge is exhaust fumes, Zky. Don’t romanticize the pollution.”
“See?” Zky whispered. “That’s the meta. Authenticity performed perfectly.” The tropical kind that doesn’t ask permission
“We’re late for the ngabuburit pop-up,” Agus finally said, referencing the pre-fast-breaking tradition that had been co-opted by Gen Z into a massive, rolling street market for vintage clothes and vegan snacks. “The ‘Y2K Bedug’ stall closes at 4:30.”
“We are the ghost of a future that hasn’t arrived yet,” Mona said, quoting a poem she’d written that morning on her private Instagram story, which would disappear in 24 hours.