The next day, she deleted the “price” column. Some spreadsheets don’t track your money—they track your life.
Here’s a short, draft story based on the prompt Title: The Spreadsheet of Small Joys
She kept scrolling. The spreadsheet had been tracking not what she spent , but what she felt . The typo had unlocked a hidden layer—a joy audit she never knew she was performing.
An obsessive budgeter discovers that a typo in her “Joyabuy” spreadsheet column leads to an unexpected windfall—not of money, but of forgotten happiness. spreadsheet joyabuy
Mara stared. She scrolled up.
Mara was exhausted. She’d just returned a defective air fryer (joy 1) and had a cold. Half-asleep, she opened Joyabuy to log a $4.99 pack of tissue paper with llamas on it (impulse buy, expected joy: 3). But her finger slipped.
Her most prized sheet was — a column where she logged every non-essential purchase under $20. The rule was simple: for each item, she’d later rate its “joy return” (1–10). A fancy coffee: joy 6. A used paperback: joy 9. A scented candle that gave her a headache: joy 2. The next day, she deleted the “price” column
Mara’s life ran on spreadsheets. Not the dull kind for work, but her own creations: Annual Spending , Meal Prep Efficiency , Net Worth Tracker . Every expense, every calorie, every minute was tabulated, color-coded, and cross-referenced.
"Feb 14 – single rose ($5.00)" → "You bought it for yourself after a bad review at work. You put it in a jam jar. It lasted 11 days. Every morning you smiled. True joy: 8."
"Jan 22 – mystery novel ($1.50, thrift)" → "You read it in one night. You laughed out loud at the bad dialogue. Your cat slept on your chest. True joy: 10." The spreadsheet had been tracking not what she
