And then you fuck right?
vateso5074
Runs great on Netscape Navigator as well.
Nope, I made it up while bored out of my mind at work and trying to think of random scenarios just as thought experiments. This one seemed good enough to share, but I'm not a good judge of what people are into, I can remove it if it's shit.
This may be one of the better ideas I've read so far. Incredible, kudos!
I think you caught me there on a verbiage technicality.
I probably should have worded it better in the additional details of the premise, but my intent was that your old self simply doesn't exist in this timeline. Your family is there, but they had some other kid instead of you on the same date you were born.
If your name is Jarnathan Smith, you like baseball and your favorite color is puce, you'd instead find that your family had a kid named Archideld Smith who likes rugby and whose favorite color is mauve.
Yep...you have a diary which likely covers big life events and chunks of recent history, but I hope you're a good actor.
My thoughts were similar to what others had suggested, find some way to simulate an accident, some sort of head trauma, or a serious illness to help sell why you suddenly can't remember much and why your personality is different. But I think a whole lot is going to require trying to be as invisible as possible for a while and try to pick up context clues from observing people around you.
And in the scenario above, even if simply explaining your situation honestly didn't suddenly kill you, I would hate to imagine the reaction of these parents who realize their child is effectively dead and has been replaced by some sort of fae changeling.
Well you're in luck, one bonus of the scenario is stipulated in the body of the post!
Your biological sex matches your gender identity (flip a coin if you are enby)
2002… uff, that would be hard. As a ten year old there is so little you can do!
Yep, that's the catch! You have the knowledge, but who's gonna let a 10-year-old open an investment account? Or who's going to believe that a presumably middle-of-the-pack 4th grader suddenly unlocked the secret to mRNA vaccines?
I'm with you, I think identity theft is probably the easiest way to start out (especially back then when it was so widespread, and not as many people knew what to look out for) but it becomes one more secret to have to keep covered up that can screw you over later if found out.
Yep. My household in 2002 had a computer, but that's because I had a parent who worked in IT. Most people I knew at the time didn't have one. By 2002, ~40% of the United States still did not have access to a computer at home, though the gap would keep closing year over year.
But that's just data for the United States. Other countries may have had lower rates of adoption at that time, and in a scenario where you would be less likely to wake up in a random household with a computer, it would require a bit more thinking to figure out how to get access to one.
I'd probably look to schools and libraries as a place to start. If that's not an option, then it'd be figuring out how to befriend a local rich kid who might have a computer. Otherwise, the USB is effectively a paperweight for some time and you're left only with your memories of the future for guidance until computer access becomes more available.
Yeah, I picked that year for a reason. I was going to go with 2000 at first, but thought that people would feel too inclined to have stopping 9/11 be their first priority, thereby sending the world down a radically different trajectory.
Was thinking similarly regarding the stock market situation. I wanted to accommodate a window for people to game the stock market with prior knowledge, but wanted to leave everything after the 2008 global financial crisis a mystery, so capped its predictability to 2007.
Absolutely!
Luckily everyone gets a Wikipedia backup detailing all of the things people won Nobel Prizes for up until 2025, so you have that advantage going for you.
Problem is how to make it seem realistic for an 18-year-old to accomplish, and how to actually go about doing the thing on your own.
Might not be that far-fetched, just given how shitty life in Japan was for peasants during that time. You've got religious institutions like Shinto propped up by the ruling class as an extension of their power and a signifier of their right to rule (e.g. the Emperor being a living god).
Some new religion comes along preaching equality and love that also happens to upset the status quo, people might think it's at least something worth trying out. And there's already this weird dynamic going on with Shinto and Buddhism coexisting, what harm is there throwing one more into the mix?