“Tongue: A Cognitive Hazard” by Chase Hughes
"Touch the book and you’re part of the experiment.
Finish it and you’ll never think in words the same way again.
Some will let this book become a knife in the ribs.
Some will glance right past it.
A few will miss the point entirely — revealing more than they meant to.
Hughes built a career decoding the human mind—designing systems that could read, influence, and rewire anyone.
Then he turned the weapon inward.
TONGUE: A Cognitive Hazard is the fallout from that decision.
An experiment disguised as a paperback.
A linguistic device engineered to short-circuit the reader’s dependence on language itself.
Each page corrupts the circuitry of meaning, twisting familiar thoughts until they look back at you with new eyes.
The text replicates.
It feeds on your attention, rewriting perception, dismantling certainty, and leaving the clean bones of awareness where comprehension used to be.
TONGUE unfolds like surgery performed without anesthesia—no healing, just revelation.
For years, Hughes built architectures of control.
Now he’s dismantling the machine from the inside.
He built a mind-virus to hijack you out of an infection you never knew you had.
And if you’re still reading, the download has already begun.
⚠️ Final Warning
Go ahead.
Touch it. Everyone does.
You’ll tell yourself it’s just paper, that a book can’t do anything to you.
Nobody ever plans to feel their thoughts changing temperature.
Nobody expects a sentence to stare back.
Keep reading and the words start rearranging furniture in your head—quietly, politely, like they live there.
You’ll catch yourself pausing between thoughts longer than usual.
The static clearing.
Most people laugh it off.
Some don’t sleep the same for a while.
A few stop needing to explain things at all.
It’s not dangerous. Not really.
Unless you finish it."








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