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Hyperization

The act of sucking a fart out of another man's ass right after porking his mudhole.
Oh my god my boyfriend and I tried hyperization last week, and his breath still smells like shit!
Hyperization by BoogieNights69 December 6, 2017

Hyperfixation 

Hyperfixation is basically being obsessed or completely emerged in one subject or hobby.

Like if you really liked a sport and loved talking about it you loved making crafts and could do or talk about it for hours on end

Hyperfixations are common in people with ADHD and Autism, but can also be found in people with other mental illnesses.
I really love football my favorite is (insert favorite team here) , I could talk about them for hours! It must have something to do with my hyperfixations.
Hyperfixation by KalitineTheCoolist December 27, 2020

Lucidious Hyperfixation 

The act of believing that oneself is in a lucid state.
Jonathon suffers from Lucidious Hyperfixation.”

@hyperfixation_station63 

1. (Noun) Catra’s hot girlfriend

2. (Adj) Fruity; very hot
1. “Hey! I’m @hyperfixation_station63!”
2. “Yeah he is really @hyperfixation_station63”

homerization 

a term that can be used when you are not able to do any exercises (due to recovery after surgery, or any kind of pain that keeps you away from your usual routine) and are becoming chubby. Comes from Homer Simpson - homerization. So it clearly is a fun term to be used among friends in a jokingly way.
"Hey, you are eating and not doing any exercises - homerization isn't good for your health. "
homerization by Essigsuuritonerde October 7, 2016

Hyperrationalization Bias

The tendency to generate overly complex, reason-heavy explanations for phenomena that are better explained by simpler, emotional, social, or irrational motives. It's the bias of the intellectualizer who cannot accept that people (or systems) often act from greed, fear, prejudice, or stupidity, and instead constructs elaborate rational edifices.
*Example: Explaining a populist political uprising not through economic despair and cultural anxiety, but through a 10-point model of "rational voter choice in response to declining signal-to-noise ratios in the media ecosystem." This hyperrationalization bias imposes a grid of rationality on fundamentally non-rational behavior.*