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There's a version of yourself you've been carrying around for years that believes certain things about your life are uniquely yours. The weird habits nobody else would understand. The specific fears that don't make logical sense but exist anyway. The small rituals you developed as a kid that you never questioned because they were just part of how you moved through the world. Your experience, your interior life, your very specific way of being a person.
And then one day the internet shows you a meme and the whole thing collapses.
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Because it turns out that the thing you thought was yours, that inexplicable behavior, that irrational fear, that completely specific memory, belongs to approximately four hundred million other people who were all doing the exact same thing in completely different places at completely different times without any coordination whatsoever. No group chat. No shared cultural moment. Just billions of humans, independently arriving at the same conclusions, developing the same habits, and living through the same experiences while fully believing they were doing it alone.
This is the universal experience. And it is both deeply comforting and mildly unsettling once you really sit with it.
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The comforting part is obvious. There's something genuinely warm about discovering that the things that felt strange or embarrassing or uniquely yours are actually just part of being human. That the experience you thought marked you as weird or different or slightly broken is, in fact, a completely standard feature of the human condition that came pre-installed in everyone. You weren't weird. You were just a person, doing person things, in a world full of people doing the exact same person things without telling each other.
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The unsettling part is the implication. If so many of your most personal, most specific experiences are actually universal, what does that say about the rest of them? How much of what you consider uniquely you is actually just the standard package? How individual are any of us, really, when we're all scared of the same things and comforted by the same things and making the same mistakes in the same order at roughly the same ages?
The answer is probably: more individual than the memes suggest, but less individual than we'd like to believe. Which is fine. Better than fine, actually. There's freedom in realizing you were never as alone in any of it as you thought. We were all there. Every single one of us.
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