Skip to main content

If You Sense Someone Tracing Words, They Are suicidal Anod What The Fuck 

If You Sense Someone Tracing Words, They Are suicidal Anod What The Fuck
If You Sense Someone Tracing Words, They Are suicidal Anod What The Fuck

If You Sense Someone Tracing Words, They Are Homocidal Anod What The Fuck 

If You Sense Someone Tracing Words, They Are Homocidal Anod What The Fuck
If You Sense Someone Tracing Words, They Are Homocidal Anod What The Fuck

The 9th-Sense 

The 9th-sense is pretty much empathic precognition: being able to sense when something is about to or potentially going to happen, and being able to sense/see potential futures with or without someone or some events.
"How did you know that was going to happen?"

"My 9th-sense kicked in. Which, the 9th-sense is pretty much what is going to happen or what might happen in the near future."

"......What?!......"
The 9th-Sense by King Wilbur September 17, 2025

In the Zutt sense

A phrase used online or in conversation to describe taking on a hardship, role, or task that is excessively humiliating, degrading, or painfully thankless - something most people would refuse to do out of self-respect or comfort. It implies helping or enduring past reasonable limits, often out of loyalty, necessity, or extreme commitment.
“I’ll do almost anything for my friends - but not in the Zutt sense.”

“I’ll help you become a good artist, even if I have to do it in the Zutt sense.”
In the Zutt sense by Chauwa January 2, 2026

Ghost in every sense of the word

A phrase I have apparently hallucinated as being in Metal Gear Solid 3/Delta, yet it still fits the vibe of Metal Gear Solid. I thought it came from the first radio call with Major Zero in MGS 3/Delta, but after rewatching that part, I was wrong.

("You're a ghost, Snake, in every sense of the word." is the phrase I wanted to put in the definition box, but it has to be said in the same order to post.)
"You're a ghost in every sense of the word."

Confirmation Bias of Common Sense

The process by which certain beliefs become elevated to the status of "common sense" precisely because they have been confirmed so often, by so many, for so long, that their confirmation is no longer visible as an active process. Common sense feels like direct perception of reality, not a hypothesis, because its confirmation history is buried in cultural memory. This bias hides the contingency of these beliefs, making alternatives seem not just wrong, but insane. Common sense is the ghost of confirmation bias after it has become invisible.
Confirmation Bias of Common Sense Example: In 1700, it was common sense that the Earth was young and that kings ruled by divine right. These weren't beliefs; they were the backdrop of reality. Questioning them was folly. Today, common sense includes human rights and germ theory. Confirmation Bias of Common Sense reveals that yesterday's common sense was just a massively confirmed hypothesis, and today's will be tomorrow's historical curiosity. The bias is in forgetting that all sense was once nonsense.