This essay attempts to trace the currents of anxieties and fears that overflowed the digital during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. Traveling with such flows, this work aims to model the questions that, circulating silently in a sort of latent state before the catastrophe, now haunt us as brutally unveiled; namely, to which extent the digital mediations we have attached to ourselves, to our lives, in order to know and experience this world under a protected mode, now push us to witness that that world has expelled us? To which extent these digital mediations tell us that now we belong more to them, than to that old world of which we became blind almost a century ago? Through a post-hermeneutical approach, one that analyzes some of the digital traces left by the rise of this pandemic by discussing them through the lens of media history and media theory, this work seeks to sketch a short media history of loss; the loss of many, the loss of our-selves.