Skip to main content
Its the feeling of excitement you get before/or during a convention for anime, science fiction, ext. Usually this only happens with the younger members of the community though.
Night Before a Convention
friend 1: OMG I CAN'T SLEEP!!!!!
friend 2: I. KNOW. RIGHT!
1: Its like when we were in kindergarden and the teacher said that we were going to the farm and you couldn't sleep the night before!
2: Face it dude, we have ConHigh!
1:WOOOOOOOOOOO
ConHigh by AshinWonderland09 November 8, 2011
ConHigh mug front
Get the ConHigh mug.
See more merch

confHIGHdence 

The feeling of over all confidence to do anything from talking to any girl at a party or saying whatever you want without getting embarrased because you are HIGH
Guy 1: Dude what happened, why'd you stop talking to that girl outta no where?

Guy 2: Ionno man i guess sobered up and lost all the confHIGHdence...

Guy 1: Oooo, tough bro, oh well my turn
confHIGHdence by qwertyqwert2 January 30, 2010
Related Words

Conlighting

A Digitallighting tactic that accuses the target of being a “charlatan,” “con artist,” or “fraud,” often based solely on their beliefs, practices, or experiences. Conlighting is frequently paired with prooflighting and psycholighting: the perpetrator demands impossible evidence of sincerity or efficacy, then uses the target’s failure to meet those demands as “proof” that they are intentionally deceiving others. It is especially common against spiritual practitioners, alternative healers, and anyone whose worldview falls outside strict scientific materialism. Conlighting weaponizes suspicion to destroy credibility.
Example: “She offered free guided meditations; he called her a con artist exploiting the vulnerable. When she asked how, he said ‘real meditation doesn’t need guides.’ Conlighting: labeling someone a fraud because you don’t share their practice.”
Conlighting by Abzugal March 31, 2026

Conlighting

A form of Digitallighting that uses accusations of fraud, greed, or “grifting” to make the target doubt their own integrity. The perpetrator repeatedly insinuates that the target is running a scam, that they know their work is worthless, or that they are cynically manipulating others. Over time, the target may begin to question their own motives, wondering if they really are exploiting people. Conlighting is especially damaging to activists and practitioners who rely on public trust, as it attacks the foundation of their work.
Example: “She spent years offering free resources; he replied to every post with ‘grifter’ and ‘she just wants money.’ After months, she started asking herself if she was being selfish—conlighting, making sincerity feel like greed.”
Conlighting by Abzugal April 1, 2026