This is a tale about a few things. First and foremost, it's a tale based off of an idea that I had as a kid (I want to say about 14 years old) when I absently considered how the concept of a person's "second death" (when nobody remembers them anymore) would work. Secondly, this is a story of depression and self-hatred materialized in perhaps the most pretentious, ham-handed way possible. Thirdly, this is what I'd like to think is the antithesis to Anantashesha. Where SCP-3000 explores the fear of being forgotten and of life being meaningless in the end, this tale is based off of the fear of being remembered, and the odd existential dread of not having emotions.
I have the right to be forgotten / Discussion
This is the discussion related to the wiki page I have the right to be forgotten.
page revision: 7, last edited: 17 Nov 2020 06:16