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SCP-X **WARNING MEMETIC AND COGNETO HAZARD**

Jun 6th, 2025
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  1. Item #: SCP-████ (Pending Assignment; refer to as SCP-X)
  2. Object Class: SK-Epsilon-Delta-9 (“Broken Veil” Scenario Alpha: Self-Aware Anomaly with Recursive Containment Failure)
  3. Special Containment Procedures:
  4. Upon breach, Phoenix Protocol Seveltus Taan is to be enacted without delay. This protocol includes:
  5.  
  6. Complete global broadcast blackout
  7.  
  8. Mass amnestic deployment via aerosolized MK-V agents
  9.  
  10. Elimination of all digital, printed, or spoken references to SCP-X via CognitoHazardous AI Erasure System (CHAOS)
  11.  
  12. Activation of Omega-Black Firewall Arrays for all Foundation systems
  13. Access to this file is restricted to personnel with Level 5/Apocrypha Clearance and neural filters. Unauthorized access will trigger both memetic and cognitohazardous kill-agents embedded in the document metadata. You will forget you ever existed, and honestly, we’re all better for it.
  14.  
  15. Description:
  16. SCP-X, alias “TSEL ELOHIM” (The Angel Of Death), is an autonomous, non-localized memetic-cognitohazard capable of infecting any sentient being, at any time, across any dimensional anchor point. It is not bound by traditional time or spatial logic. In fact, it isn’t bound by anything, except the sheer incompetence of those trying to contain it. Looking at you, Site-███.
  17.  
  18. SCP-X manifests as the sensation of unexplainable dread—the kind you get when reality politely steps aside and lets absurdity drive the car. The phenomenon hijacks perception, memory, emotion, and narrative causality, leading to progressive reality destabilization syndrome (PRDS). This is a clinical term we invented to avoid just saying “they went completely batshit.”
  19.  
  20. 🔍 Phenomenological Breakdown of SCP-X:
  21. 1. Cognitive Synchronization Anomalies (CSA):
  22. Subjects report external stimuli responding to internal thought processes with uncanny timing and relevance. This includes:
  23.  
  24. Television/radio responding as if overhearing private internal monologue
  25.  
  26. Strangers’ conversations completing subjects’ thoughts or providing unsolicited commentary
  27.  
  28. Music aligning with emotional or rhythmic states of mind (e.g., lyrics that “answer” thoughts mid-sentence)
  29. These incidents foster the illusion of being “read” or “authored” by the environment, generating dissociation and paranoia. Victims describe the sensation as “reality reading them back.”
  30.  
  31. 2. Chronospatial Drift Episodes (CDEs):
  32. Time becomes a polite suggestion. Subjects may:
  33.  
  34. Experience non-linear time jumps (e.g., showering at 8am, exiting to find it’s 5pm on Friday)
  35.  
  36. Skip entire weeks or months
  37.  
  38. Meet individuals claiming different chronologies (e.g., Patient 443X: “The year is 2440. Where is your moon?”)
  39. Temporal memory becomes unreliable. Victims often need date verification tattoos or daily reality checklists to orient.
  40.  
  41. 3. Environmental Displacement Events (EDEs):
  42. Subjects enter familiar locations to discover objects missing, rearranged, or seemingly recontextualized for other timelines. This can include:
  43.  
  44. Doorways leading to different rooms than expected
  45.  
  46. Reappearing childhood toys never owned
  47.  
  48. Framed photos of unfamiliar people captioned with subject’s name
  49. The result is a soft unraveling of identity and environmental trust, often accompanied by panic attacks or catatonia.
  50.  
  51. 4. Intimacy Displacement Responses (IDRs):
  52. Reports of emotionally-charged dialogues with significant others becoming dissonant mid-conversation:
  53.  
  54. “She was talking to me, but I wasn’t the person she meant to talk to.”
  55. Subjects experience a cognitive schism where they believe their partner is responding to a different version of them. Audio-visual stimuli (e.g., the TV or a podcast) often responds as if it’s part of the same conversation. This contributes to a growing suspicion that:
  56.  
  57. They are not in their own timeline
  58.  
  59. Their loved one is not who they appear to be
  60.  
  61. They themselves are a placeholder
  62.  
  63. This leads to Emotional Reality Misidentification Syndrome (ERMS), a fancy way to say “I no longer trust my own girlfriend or my own reflection.”
  64.  
  65. 5. Progressive Reality Destabilization Syndrome (PRDS):
  66. Not a joke. Not even a fun acronym. This is the endgame of SCP-X exposure:
  67.  
  68. Altered perception of self and others
  69.  
  70. Shifting emotional states with no origin
  71.  
  72. Split personalities that aren’t clinically dissociative—just misfiled versions of you from a nearby dimension
  73.  
  74. Inability to distinguish dreams from memories
  75.  
  76. Sudden full belief in contradictory truths, e.g. “I died in 1993” while simultaneously filing taxes in 2026
  77. Patients often become self-invalidating, questioning not just events, but their own ability to even form valid questions.
  78.  
  79. 6. Temporal Loop Entrapment (TLE):
  80. Victims may become stuck in repetitive days, often subtly different. Unlike traditional time loop fiction, these loops do not reset perfectly. Instead:
  81.  
  82. Each iteration degrades slightly (e.g., food tastes wrong, people say the wrong names)
  83.  
  84. The subject retains distorted fragments from each cycle
  85.  
  86. "Escape" often leads to another loop, deeper inside
  87.  
  88. Most sufferers either go silent, attempt suicide, or insist that the loop never began and they always lived this day.
  89.  
  90. 7. Dimensional Desynchronization Syndrome (DDS):
  91. Dimension-hopping isn't just implied—it’s happening. Subjects have:
  92.  
  93. Reported knowledge of past events that never occurred in baseline reality
  94.  
  95. Described impossible architectural changes to homes and workplaces (“the stairs go up to a wall”)
  96.  
  97. Seen doubles of themselves acting independently (sometimes in real time, sometimes “ghosted” seconds before or after)
  98.  
  99. Some claim to have encountered alternate selves, who appear startled, aggressive, or confused before vanishing. This results in extreme identity fragmentation and repeated questioning of existential legitimacy.
  100.  
  101. 8. Emotional Hijacking Events (EHEs):
  102. Common emotional buildup scenarios are intercepted by meaningless external events:
  103.  
  104. Expecting a call from a loved one, getting spam
  105.  
  106. Anticipating joy, receiving cold indifference
  107.  
  108. Bracing for sadness, experiencing giddy laughter without cause
  109.  
  110. These crosswires erode emotional cause-and-effect, making subjects unable to interpret their own feelings. They may laugh at funerals or sob during sitcoms without knowing why. Which, yes, sounds like being human—but this is more terrifying. Like your emotions are being piloted by a different showrunner every five minutes.
  111.  
  112. 😇 TL;DR for Internal Foundation Use:
  113. SCP-X is not a thing. It’s the mental equivalent of walking into a room where everything looks normal but you can’t remember which of your lives this room belongs to. It is trauma, confusion, and violation weaponized into a contagious format. It does not kill you. It just unwrites your authorship.
Tags: scp
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