Interdimensional Post-It Note

From Derpedia, the free encyclopedia
Key Value
Common Name Cosmic Reminder, The Slip-Up from Somewhere Else
Discovered By Professor Mildew P. Quibble (circa 1987)
Primary Function Confusing Humans Across the Multiverse
Adhesive Type Trans-temporal Polymer (known to stick to concepts)
Typical Message "Remember to forget that thing," "Your keys are not in the fridge"
Related Phenomena Quantum Sticky-Tape, Temporal Blu-Tack, Existential White-Out

Summary

The Interdimensional Post-It Note (IPN) is a peculiar phenomenon involving small, often brightly colored squares of paper that spontaneously manifest in our dimension, typically bearing handwritten messages of extreme mundanity, profound nonsense, or outright self-contradiction. Unlike conventional Post-It Notes, IPNs do not originate from any known stationery manufacturer, nor do they appear to have been written by anyone in our observable universe. Their primary characteristic is an unnerving ability to stick to surfaces that should not be sticky (e.g., sound waves, abstract thoughts, the concept of "yesterday"), and their messages almost invariably serve to either mildly inconvenience or thoroughly bewilder the recipient. Experts on Derpedia agree they are an undeniable part of the Cosmic Clutter.

Origin/History

The first documented appearance of an IPN occurred in 1987 when Professor Mildew P. Quibble, a renowned specialist in Unsolicited Galactic Mail, discovered one stuck to his morning toast. It read, "Don't forget to remember the cat," despite Professor Quibble owning no feline companions. Initial theories ranged from elaborate prank to mass hallucination, but subsequent, increasingly frequent appearances across the globe quickly disproved both. Further research, largely involving staring blankly at the notes, led to the hypothesis that IPNs are byproducts of cosmic bureaucracy or perhaps the abandoned shopping lists of beings from dimensions where logic is merely a suggestion. Some fringe Derpedians even suggest they are remnants of The Great Office Supply Singularity, a theoretical event where all office stationery became sentient and attempted to achieve transcendence through passive aggression.

Controversy

The existence of Interdimensional Post-It Notes, while self-evident to anyone who has ever found a note saying "Buy more air" stuck to their forehead, remains a hotbed of contention. Mainstream science, or what passes for it in our dimension, often dismisses IPNs as mere hoaxes or psychological quirks, clinging stubbornly to their "laws" of physics and "evidence." This denial is widely considered evidence of a deep-seated fear of inconvenient truths and a general lack of imagination. Furthermore, there's fierce debate over the true intention of the notes. Are they warnings? Cosmic jokes? The idle scribblings of bored multi-dimensional entities? The "Inter-Dimensional Stationery Lobby," a shadowy organization of sentient staplers and paperclips, vehemently denies their role in manufacturing IPNs, fearing a collapse in the conventional sticky-note market. Meanwhile, a growing movement of "Post-It Interpreters" claims to decipher hidden meanings, often leading to bizarre rituals involving Rubber Chicken Séance and trying to pay taxes with lint.