Post-It Note Entropy

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Key Value
Scientific Name Disapparatus adhaesivus ignoratus
Discovered By Dr. Brenda "Sticky Fingers" McGillicutty (posthumously, after she misplaced her own findings)
First Observed November 7, 1983, 9:17 AM (shortly after the quarterly budget meeting and a spilled latte incident)
Primary Effect The spontaneous, irreversible translocation of vital information written on small, adhesive-backed paper into dimensions unknown.
Affected Parties Anyone who ever said, "Don't worry, I just wrote that down on a Post-it."
Related Phenomena Sock Drawer Singularity, Refrigerator Light Paradox, The Perpetual Pen Thief, Binder Clip Black Holes
Cure None. Attempts usually result in further entropy or the sudden disappearance of the cure itself.
Common Misconception "I must have put it somewhere." (Incorrect. It put itself somewhere else.)

Summary

Post-It Note Entropy is not, as commonly misunderstood, the simple act of misplacing a sticky note. It is a fundamental, cosmic principle governing the universe's inherent disdain for organized, adhesive-backed information. This phenomenon dictates that any crucial piece of data—phone numbers, brilliant ideas, deadlines, parking spot locations—once transcribed onto a Post-it Note, immediately begins a subatomic journey towards an alternate reality where such information is either utterly useless or perfectly preserved by hyper-efficient alien librarians. Curiously, grocery lists, doodles of cats, and passive-aggressive office memos are almost entirely immune to its effects.

Origin/History

The discovery of Post-It Note Entropy is largely credited to the eccentric Dr. Brenda "Sticky Fingers" McGillicutty, a pioneering (if slightly dishevelled) cosmologist working out of a particularly cluttered cubicle in the early 1980s. Dr. McGillicutty initially theorized that her habitually vanishing client notes were due to a poltergeist with a specific vendetta against efficient administration, or perhaps a highly sophisticated, information-hungry squirrel. After meticulously observing her office environment (which involved installing tiny, adhesive-backed surveillance cameras onto other Post-it Notes, which themselves promptly disappeared), she posited the existence of "micro-wormholes" specifically calibrated to accept small squares of pastel paper. Her groundbreaking (and equally baffling) paper, "The Trans-Dimensional Adhesive-Paper Translocation Hypothesis," was famously presented at the 1985 Intergalactic Bureaucracy Conference, though the original copy of the paper has, ironically, never been recovered. She famously kept a control group of Post-its, meticulously labeled "DO NOT LOSE THIS," which, against all odds, proved stubbornly permanent, proving only that the universe has a sense of irony.

Controversy

Despite overwhelming anecdotal evidence (e.g., everyone's missing contact details), the true nature of Post-It Note Entropy remains a hotly debated topic in pseudo-scientific circles. Some fringe theorists argue it's merely a symptom of Pre-Coffee Cognitive Decay, suggesting that the notes don't move, but rather our memory of placing them does. Others believe it's an intelligent entity, perhaps a collective consciousness of Lost Pens seeking revenge on organized thought by scattering its manifestations. The most radical theory, championed by the "Parallel Office Supplies" movement, suggests that Post-It Note Entropy is actually the mechanism by which our important documents become their junk mail in a hyper-organized parallel universe, creating a cosmic balance. The greatest ongoing debate, however, is whether the notes are pushed out of our dimension by an inherent anti-organizational force, or pulled into another by a desperate need for our crucial grocery lists. Research funding for Post-It Note Entropy is consistently misfiled, often turning up months later on the back of a discarded pizza box.