WooouTK
TMF Expert
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2021
- Messages
- 584
- Points
- 63
Follow me on PATREON and you'll be able to access a total of 12 angles of this scene, as well as hundreds of other publications.
"Incident Report
Xenobiological Incident No. 37
Author: Xhêra-Naal, Xenobiologist
Species: No. 12, self-identified as humans
Subject: Adult Female No. 8
During a standard sensory evaluation, Subject No. 8 exhibited an immediate and anomalous reaction to a light tactile stimulus applied to the plantar surface. The response included near-total loss of voluntary motor control, repeated ineffective withdrawal attempts, and continuous vocalizations typically associated with positive emotional states in humans.
The contradiction between apparent flight behavior and signals of well-being remains functionally unexplained.
Despite the subject’s clear behavioral collapse, sensors confirmed no pain, physical damage, or genuine threat. The observed neural activity spike serves no recognizable adaptive purpose and appears solely to disrupt normal functioning.
As the subject became inoperative for routine testing—unable to remain still, cooperate, or communicate effectively—the research team increased restraint measures, not as a corrective action, but to remove irrelevant variables and allow the experiment to continue.
The procedure has been repeated multiple times with identical results: while the stimulus persists, the subject remains trapped in a loop of useless, noisy, and entirely predictable reactions, showing no signs of adaptation, learning, or reflex fatigue.
It is concluded that the human nervous system exhibits absurdly exploitable vulnerabilities to harmless stimuli, raising questions about the species’ evolutionary efficiency.
Until this behavioral anomaly is understood or ceases to produce new data, the procedure will be repeated as necessary.
End of Report."
"Incident Report
Xenobiological Incident No. 37
Author: Xhêra-Naal, Xenobiologist
Species: No. 12, self-identified as humans
Subject: Adult Female No. 8
During a standard sensory evaluation, Subject No. 8 exhibited an immediate and anomalous reaction to a light tactile stimulus applied to the plantar surface. The response included near-total loss of voluntary motor control, repeated ineffective withdrawal attempts, and continuous vocalizations typically associated with positive emotional states in humans.
The contradiction between apparent flight behavior and signals of well-being remains functionally unexplained.
Despite the subject’s clear behavioral collapse, sensors confirmed no pain, physical damage, or genuine threat. The observed neural activity spike serves no recognizable adaptive purpose and appears solely to disrupt normal functioning.
As the subject became inoperative for routine testing—unable to remain still, cooperate, or communicate effectively—the research team increased restraint measures, not as a corrective action, but to remove irrelevant variables and allow the experiment to continue.
The procedure has been repeated multiple times with identical results: while the stimulus persists, the subject remains trapped in a loop of useless, noisy, and entirely predictable reactions, showing no signs of adaptation, learning, or reflex fatigue.
It is concluded that the human nervous system exhibits absurdly exploitable vulnerabilities to harmless stimuli, raising questions about the species’ evolutionary efficiency.
Until this behavioral anomaly is understood or ceases to produce new data, the procedure will be repeated as necessary.
End of Report."



