phoxxent: nightmare-your-worst: bonercancer69:nightmare-your-worst:sneggleblech:nightmare-your
phoxxent: nightmare-your-worst: bonercancer69: nightmare-your-worst: sneggleblech: nightmare-your-worst: nonotimetoulouse: I think about the Mandela Effect approx once a day I swear to fucking god it waa always E It was never e. It fucking WAS DAMN YOU wait is it an a or an e now? after the timeline shift it is a. But a few years ago it was most assuredly e It was never an E and the mandela effect is bullshitYou just never paid attention to it until the internet told you to, and assumed it was an E because E and A look similar in cursive I imagine the confusion is because people are more used to ‘-stein’ than ‘-stain’, ie. Einstein, Frankenstein, Ben Stein. (At least, where I’m from.) I worked at a book store before I’d heard of the Mandela Effect, and I distinctly remember searching our computer inventory for “Berenstein Bears” and being surprised that I’d spelled it wrong.People aren’t just “paying attention because the internet told them to”, I think the internet just facilitated the sharing of experiences. I’m relieved to know I’m not just a dum-dum who couldn’t spell a book title properly; everyone else was a dum-dum too. That doesn’t mean the mass realization isn’t interesting, or that it’s manufactured. And no, it doesn’t prove the existence of parallel universes, but it’s heckin fun to think about. It’s ok to look for strangeness in the ordinary and imagine there’s something other than our tedious, earthly, linear lives. That’s where a lot of books and movies and art come from. -- source link