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Trauma from Reddit Shadowban

A double-layered hell specific to the site's often-Byzantine moderation. You can still post, but your votes don't count and your comments are hidden unless a moderator manually approves them. The trauma is a masterclass in futility and paranoia. You meticulously craft responses in r/AskHistorians, only to never see them appear. You upvote a cause you believe in, providing zero support. You message the admins and get an automated reply about "server issues." It feels like being trapped in a glass box, pounding on the walls while the entire world scrolls past, oblivious to your existence.
*Example: "He wrote a 5000-word, sourced breakdown on economic policy, got two upvotes (both his own alts), and no replies. His trauma from a Reddit shadowban convinced him he was just deeply stupid and boring, until he discovered the ban a year later via a third-party website."* Trauma from Reddit Shadowban
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Trauma from Discord App

The anxiety and burnout induced by the app's constant, pulsing demand for attention. The trauma stems from the blurred lines between friends, communities, and obligations, all screaming for notification in the same UI. It’s the dread of seeing the "Online" status of someone you’re avoiding, the panic of missing crucial context in a fast-moving VC, and the exhaustion of managing 50 different servers each with their own unspoken rules and dramas. The app itself becomes a source of stress, its ping sound triggering a fight-or-flight response, turning your primary social hub into a digital panopticon.
Example: "The Discord notification sound makes her physically jump. She has full trauma from the Discord app itself—the endless @everyone pings, the stress of managing admin roles, and the haunting memory of a 3 AM voice chat debate about anime that ended three friendships." Trauma from Discord App
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Trauma from Discord Servers

The distinct social carnage caused by the rise and catastrophic fall of a specific online community. This isn't about the app, but the volatile micro-societies within it. The trauma involves witnessing (or causing) epic, personal drama in text channels, the whiplash of inside jokes turning into weapons, the gut-punch of a mass exodus or a server nuke, and the ghost-town feeling of returning to a once-vibrant community now filled only with deleted messages and banned-user tags. You lose not just friends, but an entire shared world and history.
Example: "He gets quiet whenever someone mentions 'The Great Art Channel Purge of 2022.' That's his trauma from Discord servers. One mod's bad day led to 30 bans, the server splintering into five hostile factions, and the loss of the only place he ever felt creatively understood."
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Trauma from Twitter/X

The fractured psyche resulting from navigating a platform optimized for outrage, performativity, and context collapse. The trauma is a mix of whiplash (watching a career die in 280 characters), addiction to the drama cycle, and the cognitive dissonance of interacting with both close friends and unhinged strangers in the same feed. It breeds a defensive, clapback-ready communication style in real life and leaves you with a lingering sense that any opinion, joke, or decade-old tweet could be the one that summons the mob. The platform's constant rebranding and policy chaos only add to the surreal, unstable feeling.
Example: "She quit a year ago, but still has trauma from Twitter. She'll start drafting a simple group text, then delete it seven times fearing it could be 'misinterpreted.' She also calls any argument a 'thread' and has a Pavlovian urge to check her phone during any real-world scandal." Trauma from Twitter/X
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Trauma from YouTube

The specific drain caused by the platform's algorithmic rabbit holes and the paradox of infinite choice. The trauma isn't just about the content, but the relationship with it: the hours lost to autoplay, the guilt of feeding a recommendation engine that then radicalizes others, the whiplash from cute animals to conspiracy theories, and the crushing pressure of "content creator" hustle culture. It's the feeling of your attention span being industrially farmed, leaving you with a hollow, overstimulated mind and the eerie sense that a machine knows your subconscious fears better than you do.
Example: "His 'Watch Later' playlist has over 900 videos. He has classic trauma from YouTube—can't focus on a movie, gets anxious if a video is over 10 minutes, and once had a full existential crisis because the algorithm recommended a kids' cartoon after a documentary on dying stars." Trauma from YouTube
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Venturing into the most lawless, id-driven textual battlefield on the internet and expecting civility. The trauma is the sheer whiplash of human expression: one comment is a brilliant, sourced analysis, the next is a racist screed, below it is a bot selling counterfeit shoes. Engaging guarantees exposure to staggering ignorance, weaponized pedantry, and personal attacks over your opinion on a video about toasters. It shatters your faith in collective discourse and leaves you with a lingering, low-grade misanthropy, questioning how so many people can function while possessing such a profound lack of reading comprehension or basic empathy.
*Example: "He made the mistake of politely correcting a fact in a history video's comments. The ensuing 200-reply thread, featuring personal insults, whataboutism, and a guy linking to his cryptocurrency scam, gave him permanent trauma from YouTube comment sections. He now types replies and deletes them, screaming into a digital void."*
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Trauma from Quora

The intellectual and moral vertigo induced by a platform that mixes genuine experts with unhinged fantasists, all presented with the same authoritative formatting. The trauma comes from the cognitive whiplash: a beautifully articulated answer by a Nobel laureate sits beside a 5000-word manifesto by a "former CIA psychic" on time travel. You waste hours down rabbit holes of plausibly-stated nonsense, start questioning basic facts, and develop a paranoid skepticism towards any declarative statement. The "Most Viewed Writer" badge becomes a symbol not of expertise, but of relentless, often unhinged, output.
Example: "She went to Quora for diet tips and emerged three hours later believing carbohydrates were a government plot, based on a 'top answer' from a 'nutritional philosopher.' She has Quora trauma—she now cross-references every piece of advice, no matter how simple, and mutters 'Source?' under her breath at dinner parties." Trauma from Quora
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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