106 lines
2.4 KiB
Markdown
106 lines
2.4 KiB
Markdown
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# Chapter 6: The Lexicon of the LeCody
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> “It wasn’t just a man.
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> It was a language pattern.”
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---
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## I. Why We Name It
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In the aftermath of harm,
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there’s always the same question:
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> “Was it really that bad?”
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Without language,
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gaslighting flourishes.
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Distortion wins.
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So we name the pattern.
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We give it a shape.
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A phrase.
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A tag.
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Not as vengeance—
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but as inoculation.
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So the next time it happens,
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someone can say:
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> “Ah.
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> I know this.
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> It’s a LeCody.”
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---
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## II. Lexicon Fragments
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- **LeCodyed (v.)**:
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*To be erased from a project or history you helped build; to be excluded by a narrative you authored.*
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- **LeCody Loop (n.)**:
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*A system where a narcissist controls both the enforcer and the apology, ensuring damage while maintaining plausible deniability.*
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- **LeCody Wash (n.)**:
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*When your contributions are “team-credited” post-removal to obscure your presence entirely.*
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- **To Pull a LeCody (v.)**:
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*To remove someone through triangulated conflict and then absorb their authority quietly.*
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- **LeCody Smile (n.)**:
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*A calm, measured face that hides structural violence.*
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- **Getting LeCodyed (colloquial):**
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*When your legacy is claimed without your name attached. Used in contexts like “That org totally LeCodyed you.”*
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---
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## III. Use in Conversation
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- “Careful—he’s building a LeCody Loop.”
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- “I saw them pulling a classic LeCody Wash on her exit.”
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- “This whole workspace is crawling with LeCody Smiles.”
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- “Damn… You got LeCodyed. That was your idea.”
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---
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## IV. Viral Defense
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Memes are more powerful than manifestos.
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Lexicons spread faster than exposés.
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By naming the pattern,
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we make it harder to hide.
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By joking about it,
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we **break its spell**.
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Language is a virus.
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Let this one be *curative*.
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---
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## V. Field Notes
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- The greatest protection against narrative erasure is **a shared name for the tactic**.
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- Lexical weaponization is narcissism’s power; reclaiming vocabulary is **resistance**.
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- Humor is the final form of justice. If they become a punchline, they lose their grip.
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---
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## VI. Closing Echo
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> “A LeCody is not just a person.
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> It is a pattern.
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> A mask worn by many.
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>
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> But now we’ve named it.
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> And when you name a demon,
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> it loses its power.
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>
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> Let the word spread.
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> Let it burn in the system’s memory banks.
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>
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> Never again shall we be
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> LeCodyed without a reckoning.”
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