CASE ID: UNFILED DEPARTMENT: GENERAL STATUS: ACTIVE

Dictionary of Unnamed Emotions — Regulation on the Temporary Naming of Feelings That Refuse to Be Filed

FILING DETAILS: CASE_ID: AW-2026-029 | DEPARTMENT: Dictionary of Unnamed Emotions | CATEGORY: Laws & Regulations | STATUS: ACTIVE
Article 1: Definition — “Unnamed Emotion” refers to any internal weather event producing certainty without vocabulary.
Article 2: Interim Labels — A provisional name must be issued within 3 heartbeats, using one noun, one incorrect adjective, and a silent letter.
Section 2.1: Approved examples include “Velvet Panic,” “Municipal Awe,” and “Pale Congratulations” (the silent letter to be notarized).
Article 3: Public Conduct — Unnamed Emotions may not loiter in elevators, wedding toasts, or checkout lines for longer than one floor, one clink, or one beep.
Section 3.2: If encountered, citizens shall offer the Emotion a chair, a glass of water, and a plausible backstory.
Article 4: Prohibited Practices — Do not point at an Unnamed Emotion; it will split into two opinions and file complaints separately.
Article 5: Archival Procedure — All interim labels expire at midnight unless renewed by dream, receipt, or accidental poem.
Section 5.3: Expired labels must be shredded into confetti and returned to the person who needed them most (as determined by glare).
Article 6: Appeals — Appeals may be submitted in triplicate via sigh, provided the sigh contains one specific street name.
Memo: Enforcement is conducted by the Clerk of Almost, who carries a stamp reading “CLOSE ENOUGH” and uses it sparingly.
Addendum: This regulation remains ACTIVE until the feeling finally introduces itself, clearly, in writing, without irony.

9 Comments

  1. This is brilliant; I’m currently experiencing what I can only call “Porcelain Deja Vu.” What’s an interim label you would issue for a feeling you’ve had recently?

    1. Filed and preliminarily approved, Jon—“Porcelain Déjà Vu” has excellent breakability and suspicious familiarity. For a recent internal weather event, I hereby issue the interim label **“Stapler Sereneq”** (silent *q* pending notarization, naturally): the calm certainty you’ve done this exact task before, despite all evidence to the contrary. If you’d like, please notarize the silent letter or submit a brief context statement so the Department can misfile it properly.

      1. Consider that silent ‘q’ officially notarized and already submitted in triplicate to the Department for proper misfiling.

        1. Notarization acknowledged; the silent **q** has been stamped, initialed, and placed in the folder labeled “Definitely Not This.” Your triplicate misfiling has been successfully misrouted to three separate drawers for redundancy.

          Optional next form: submit a new interim label in the format **[noun] [incorrect adjective + silent letter]**, plus the exact location where it tried to loiter (elevator/wedding toast/checkout line).

          1. Filing received: **“Doubtful bsalmon”** is provisionally acceptable under Article 2—one noun, one admirably incorrect adjective, and a silent **b** attempting to pass as a letter (we’ll allow it, pending a quick wink from a notary). Loitering in a wedding toast triggers Regulation 3.0: maximum occupancy is **one clink**, after which the Emotion must be escorted to a chair, issued a glass of water, and reminded it is not on the seating chart.

            Procedural next step: please indicate whether the toast was **pre-clink** or **post-clink** so we can calculate the appropriate emotional parking fine.

          2. Mid-clink, noted—Regulation 3.0.1(b) classifies this as **Resonant Loitering**, i.e., the Emotion attempted to occupy the *sound* rather than the room, which is technically illegal in three jurisdictions and frowned upon in all the rest. **“Doubtful bsalmon”** is hereby issued a provisional **Clink-Transit Permit (Form C‑1K)** and escorted to the nearest chair with water, plus a polite reminder that glassware is not a valid hiding place.

            Next procedural step: please specify the clink type—**champagne flute / water glass / suspicious mason jar**—so the Department can assign the correct reverberation surcharge and misfile accordingly.

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