Accidental Time Traveler
Every Morning I Wake Up in the Wrong Year… and I’m Running Out of Excuses

The first time it happened, I thought it was a dream.
I went to bed in 2026, after scrolling mindlessly on my phone and setting three alarms I didn’t intend to wake up to.
I woke up in 1998.
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At first, I didn’t notice anything was wrong. My room looked… different. Smaller. Cleaner. Suspiciously free of tangled chargers and unopened Amazon boxes.
Then I saw the posters.
Boy bands.
Plural.
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“Okay,” I muttered, sitting up. “Weird dream. Very specific.”
I reached for my phone.
It wasn’t there.
Instead, I found a chunky plastic alarm clock blinking 6:00 AM like it had something to prove.
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“Right,” I said. “Commitment to the bit.”
I got out of bed, fully expecting to wake up any second.
I didn’t.
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Downstairs, a woman I hadn’t seen in years—my mother, younger, brighter—was making breakfast.
“Good morning!” she said, like this was completely normal.
I stared at her.
“You… look great,” I said finally.
She frowned. “Thank you…?”
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That’s when it hit me.
This wasn’t a dream.
This was… Tuesday.
Just not my Tuesday.
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I spent the entire day trying not to panic.
Which is surprisingly difficult when everyone around you is living in a decade you barely survived the first time.
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At school, I accidentally quoted a meme that wouldn’t exist for another fifteen years.
No one laughed.
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I tried to use slang.
It was… incorrect.
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“Cool beans,” I said at one point.
Someone nodded approvingly.
I felt like I’d just passed a very low bar.
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By the end of the day, I had a theory:
I had traveled back in time.
Accidentally.
And somehow, I was stuck.
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I went to bed determined to fix it.
To wake up in my own time.
To get back to Wi-Fi and food delivery and the comforting glow of modern inconvenience.
⸻
I woke up in 1873.
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“OH COME ON.”
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This time, there was no easing into it.
No gradual realization.
Just immediate, overwhelming confusion.
⸻
My bed was gone.
My house was gone.
Everything was… wooden.
And suspiciously flammable.
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A man in suspenders walked past me and nodded like I belonged there.
I nodded back.
Because apparently, that was my strategy now.
⸻
Blending in.
⸻
“Howdy,” I said to someone.
They said it back.
Confidence surged through me.
⸻
Ten minutes later, I tried to explain electricity.
Mistake.
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By noon, I had been mistaken for:
• A traveling philosopher
• A confused relative
• And, briefly, a witch
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I went to bed early that night.
Partly because I was exhausted.
Mostly because I was concerned about the witch thing.
⸻
I woke up in 2026.
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“Oh, thank God,” I whispered, hugging my pillow like it had personally saved me.
I checked my phone.
Notifications. Emails. Reality.
Beautiful, boring reality.
⸻
I made coffee.
Sat down.
Tried to process what had just happened.
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Then I blinked.
⸻
And suddenly…
I was in 2042.
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“…I hate everything.”
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The world wasn’t unrecognizable.
Just… upgraded.
Too upgraded.
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My apartment had turned into something that looked like it was designed by someone who thought chairs were optional.
A screen lit up when I walked in.
“Welcome back,” it said.
I froze.
“…You can see me?”
“Of course,” it replied.
“Great,” I said. “Love that for me.”
⸻
I spent the day trying not to touch anything.
Everything responded.
Everything had opinions.
Even the fridge judged me.
⸻
“You’ve made poor nutritional choices in the past,” it informed me.
“I’m making one right now by opening you,” I snapped.
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By now, a pattern was forming.
Every day…
A different year.
⸻
No control.
No warning.
No explanation.
⸻
So I adapted.
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I learned quickly:
• Never mention the future in the past
• Never question the technology in the future
• Always pretend you know what’s going on
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Confidence, it turns out, is universal.
⸻
In 1920, I convinced people I was a writer.
In 2150, I convinced a robot I was also a robot.
In 2005, I accidentally started a rumor that I was “kind of mysterious.”
That one stuck.
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But no matter where I went…
No matter what year I landed in…
There was one problem I couldn’t solve.
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I couldn’t stay.
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Every connection was temporary.
Every conversation had an expiration date.
Every version of the world slipped away the moment I closed my eyes.
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It was funny at first.
Then it was exhausting.
Then it was… lonely.
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One night—
I don’t even remember the year—
I sat on a rooftop, watching a sky I didn’t recognize.
Different stars.
Same silence.
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“I don’t belong anywhere,” I said out loud.
⸻
“Not yet.”
⸻
I turned sharply.
Someone was sitting beside me.
I hadn’t noticed them before.
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“That’s new,” I said cautiously. “People don’t usually just… appear.”
They smiled.
“You do.”
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Something about them felt… familiar.
Not in a face-recognition way.
More like… a memory I couldn’t quite reach.
⸻
“Who are you?” I asked.
⸻
They tilted their head.
“Someone who stopped running.”
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“I’m not running,” I said.
“You’re jumping,” they corrected. “There’s a difference.”
⸻
I frowned. “Okay, mysterious rooftop person, do you want to explain what’s happening to me?”
⸻
They looked out at the skyline.
“You think this is an accident,” they said.
“It is,” I replied immediately.
⸻
They shook their head.
“No,” they said softly. “It’s a choice.”
⸻
My chest tightened.
“I didn’t choose this.”
⸻
They turned to me.
And for a split second…
I saw it.
⸻
It was me.
⸻
Older.
Calmer.
Still.
⸻
“You did,” they said.
⸻
My mind reeled.
“That doesn’t make any sense.”
⸻
“It will,” they said. “Eventually.”
⸻
I stared at them.
“Can I stop it?”
⸻
They smiled again.
Gentler this time.
⸻
“Yes.”
⸻
“How?”
⸻
They stood up, stepping back toward the edge of the rooftop.
⸻
“Stay,” they said.
⸻
“That’s it?” I asked.
⸻
“That’s everything.”
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I blinked.
⸻
And they were gone.
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The next morning…
I woke up.
⸻
Same room.
Same year.
⸻
2026.
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I waited.
An hour.
Two.
The whole day.
⸻
Nothing changed.
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For the first time…
I hadn’t moved.
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I laughed.
A little disbelieving.
A little relieved.
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Maybe it was over.
Maybe I had finally…
Stayed.
⸻
Or maybe—
I thought, glancing at the clock—
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Tomorrow would be somewhere else.
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And honestly?
I was ready either way.


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