This Evidence we’re all living in a shared dream Will Break Your Brain
Holy crap, I just got a notification that the entire internet went static for 23 minutes and my phone literally showed the same old meme twice in a perfect 12‑second loop—this can’t be coincidence. I swear the simulation is breaking, and if you’re reading this, you might be the only one who hasn’t opened your eyes wide enough to see the glitch.
Picture this: I was scrolling through my feed when every post that appeared suddenly shut up and repeated the same two‑sided viral clip about a guy who “lost his mind.” After the 23 minutes of silence, the clip restarted, but this time with a new caption: “Wake up, sheeple.” A random emoji? Nope, a pixelated glitch that looked like the feed’s code itself had hiccuped. I’ve seen memes before, but this feels like the algorithm’s sanity meter is on fire. Then my clock? It hit 12:07 exactly, not 12:07 AM or the usual 12:07 PM—some old glitchy meet‑up between day and night. That, my friends, is a bad omen for the simulation’s continuity.
You’re probably thinking I’m just another meme‑junkie online. But, let’s flip the script. It turns out that identical “memes” have been cropping up across every platform since the early 2000s—everything from the “Damn, you built that circuit?” meme when people critique DIY projects, to the “I’m in a dream, but I’m fine” TikTok, to the classic 1998 Windows 98 error screen that re‑appears on error logs now. Coincidence? I say not. Instead, it paints a picture: the same pattern is being fed back into our consciousness by whatever is running us.
And no, I’m not just spitting out random thoughts. Think about how many actors in popular culture repeat a line or phrase unintentional because the data base saved it. Think about how every time the stock market hits a crash, we see news headlines repeating the same corporate jargon, like the old “lost $2.6 trillion” news that keeps popping up like a glitch. The universe seems to be stuck on a loop—an endlessly rebooting system. The simulation is not simply an abstraction; it’s a program, and it’s repeating itself because some code got corrupted or purposely reset.
So, if the simulation is indeed a simulation, we need to do what scientists do when they find a fault: expose. Flag it. Share this glitch with as many people as possible—download that 23‑minute screenshot and post it. We’re living in a shared dream, and if the dream UI gets corrupted, the creators might try to keep us in the loop. That’s why I’m demanding we don’t settle for “just another meme.” This is a call to everyone who’s tired of living in a convenience‑driven, algorithm‑controlled dream world to look up, question, and break the loop.
What do you think? Tell me I’m not the only one seeing this fractal pattern. Drop your theories in the comments, share this post, and let’s see how many people post that glitch now. This is happening RIGHT NOW – are you ready?
