A modification of "Snap Back to Reality" that is used as an insult or catchphrase.
(It is intended to start conversations like it's related term "So, taxes".)
(It is intended to start conversations like it's related term "So, taxes".)
by TaxPayer1 March 14, 2024
Get the Tax Back to Reality mug.by Bro what ohhh Connor Boyce March 25, 2024
Get the your so lost in reality mug.Related Words
That final moment of clarity when he realizes that the “sports” bar his chatty, new male friends have taken him to is in fact a gay bar
Denver was great except that we missed that great , little vinyl lounge because the insurance agent need a Rocky Mountain Reality Check.
by GungaDinn May 19, 2024
Get the Rocky Mountain Reality Check mug.Someone is lying to another person in a very sarcastic way. Usually, it is obvious that the other person is lying.
Hey man, I heard that you are making out with my girlfriend. That's not cool!
Noooooooo I would never do that dude!
Man, are you screwing with reality?
Noooooooo I would never do that dude!
Man, are you screwing with reality?
by AcademicGenius June 25, 2024
Get the Screwing with Reality mug.When someone tries to deceive or mislead another person with a sarcastic lie, the attempt is so obvious or poorly executed that the other person immediately recognizes it and calls them out on their nonsense.
Alex: "Yeah, sure, I totally met Beyoncé at the grocery store last night."
Jamie: "Right, because Beyoncé does her own grocery shopping. Stop screwing with reality, Alex."
Jamie: "Right, because Beyoncé does her own grocery shopping. Stop screwing with reality, Alex."
by AcademicGenius June 25, 2024
Get the Screwing with Reality mug.The terrifying gap between the world as it appears to our senses/consciousness and the world as it might be "in itself." Our entire reality is a user-interface generated by our brains—a simplified, species-specific model optimized for survival, not truth. The hard problem is that we are forever locked inside this simulation, with no way to peek at the source code. Even our most objective instruments (telescopes, particle colliders) just feed data back into our perceptual and cognitive interface. We can never know if we're describing the "real" reality or just the next layer of a nested simulation. The map is all we have; the territory is permanently off-limits.
*Example: You see a "solid" wooden table. Physics tells you it's 99.9999999% empty space, a quantum cloud of vibrating fields. Which is the real table? The useful, evolved illusion of solidity, or the counter-intuitive mathematical description? Both are models in your mind. The hard problem: We can swap out one model for a better one (Newtonian for Quantum), but we can never discard modeling altogether to see the "thing itself." Reality is the one guest at the party who can never be directly perceived, only inferred from the reactions of others.* Hard Problem of Reality.
by Enkigal January 24, 2026
Get the Hard Problem of Reality mug.The philosophical and sociological position that much of what we experience as objective reality is, in fact, built and maintained through social agreement, language, and shared practices. This doesn't deny physical reality (gravity is real), but argues that the meaning and categories we layer onto it—money, borders, gender roles, justice—are human constructions. These constructions feel real because we all participate in them, but they can and do change across time and cultures. Reality, in this view, is a co-created performance.
Example: "The meeting was a masterclass in the Theory of Constructed Reality. The 'crisis' existed only because they'd all agreed on metrics that defined it, the 'solution' was a PowerPoint that reshaped their shared narrative, and by the end, the constructed problem and its constructed solution felt more solid than the table they were sitting at."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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