Like you get transported into an alternate universe where everything is almost same, but with tiny differences. The world looks normal to everyone and you’re the only one that have memories of the differences.
Do you think you would trust your memories or would you think you lost your mind?
Neither explicitly. I would seek more information. I would expect to be caught up in a The Leftovers type situation (2% of the world’s population inexplicably vanishes in an instant). That is to say, I would not expect to be the only one affected.
Either way, I would also seek evidence this person ever existed. If I’m truly the only one who remembers them, maybe the problem is with me. Logically speaking, I mean. There is a school of thought called “Last Thursdayism” that says that everything before last Thursday (or some abstract point in the near past) was invented by our brains. The break between short-term and long-term memory. The film Dark City plays upon this concept. (“Does anyone know how to get to Shell Beach?”)
Past a certain point, I’d be very careful who I speak to about something that seemingly I am the only person who believes differently from the rest of society.
I’m the only one remembering? Yeah I’m visiting a head doctor
I’d start looking for what filled their place: who graduated in their place? What person is filling their job position? Their brothers/sisters are the same? Wife/husband and kids? Etc.
If there is evidence of a filled void, I’d trust my memory; if not, I’d think I’ve gone crazy.
I would assume it’s psychosis and let everyone know I’m going crazy and need supervision. That seems way more likely that someone magically disappearing.
That already happened to me with everyone that I went to school with.
There we graduated and they vanished. Doesn’t bother me a bit.
I would look for psychiatric help and go over memories of that person with other people. I’d probably wonder if they were real or would also disappear.
Edit: oh shit i just remembered that i confuse things that happened in dreams with real life things sometimes. maybe this would be a more extreme version of that? dreaming a whole person. wow
I would never stop until i figured out what happened.
Probably go crazy
Lost my mind
you’re the only one that have memories of the differences.
In that case I’d believe I hallucinated it. Because the alternative explanation would be a massive conspiracy theory and those are generally silly.
I already don’t trust my memories.
The answer is: it doesn’t matter. It was real to us.
If you’re not going to lash out or try to reverse it somehow, I guess that’s a perfectly healthy way to look at it.
Well ive had the dream where I had a wife (different person to who im with) kids, a job, full life kinda stuff for like the last 10 years and was really happy. Woke up and it all faded away. Made me sad but carried on with my day. So yeah i guess I’d probably just move on. Also just to clarify my life now is pretty good, so not like I lost anything really.
If it is a person that I know in real life, then I always trust my own brain. No doubt. No insecurity.
I have the rule of never worrying about things I cannot change. So I would just move on with my life and trust that the person I was and will be is making the best decisions possible given the information and constraints of the time. YOLO
I can’t imagine you could hallucinate a person in such detail and over such a long period of time that there would never be any indication they weren’t imaginary. I would trust my memories and question the circumstances of their disappearance.
You brain makes up the details in exactly the amount you need to. That is a core problem when your brain itself is the issue.
and it’s for exactly this reason that arguing with a delusion strengthens it. If you show a person with Cotard delusions how to find their pulse they’ll come to the conclusion that dead bodies can still have a heartbeat and if you show a person with capgras delusions a DNA test now the doppelgangers can mimic DNA too. the new information just gets integrated in a way that supports the delusion. all you can do is try to distract them while the antipsychotics hit and try to keep them socially connected through unrelated stuff like hobbies, music, etc.
You brain makes up the details in exactly the amount you need to.
I would recognize that.
Sometimes I actually recognize that my brain does this at the moment, and then I know that I am dreaming right now.
Perhaps you have no mental illness then…?
IIT most people are going the other way, but IRL I think this is how the vast majority operates.
That being said, the psychotic person I deal with quite often has pretty similar reasoning about the people sneaking into her house and moving things around (it’s always her, there’s even cameras but she was there, dammit, regardless of what’s on the screen).
Inb4 they starting doing Zersetzung, rearranging furniture and then use AI to create a fake security footage.
Oh boy, if she actually understood AI there’d be a whole other layer to deal with. As it is, she continues to believe her fixed delusions, but also can’t support them, so most of the time we can just ignore it and interact normally.








