Mnemonic Clinic Case Files
MTA
A collection of fictional case studies from a clinic that edits traumatic memories
*Mnemonic Clinic Case Files* is a speculative fiction work presented as a series of clinical records from a facility capable of editing, dampening, or fabricating human memories. Through various case studies, the book explores the technical and ethical boundaries of a world where trauma can be surgically removed and identity can be optimized. Each chapter follows a different patient—ranging from a veteran haunted by combat to a corporate executive seeking to "reset" professional burnout—highlighting the complex interplay between chemistry, narrative, and the human soul.
The narrative is anchored by clinicians like Dr. Lena Voss and Dr. Aris Thorne, who act as technicians of the human story. They navigate a bureaucracy of "Consent Matrices" and "Intake Algorithms" while grappling with the unintended consequences of their work, such as "mnemonic smearing" and "identity drift." As the clinic treats diverse cases—including a family seeking a collective "Symmetry Wipe" of a toxic holiday and an artist fearing the loss of her creative edge—it becomes clear that the pain being removed is often inextricably braided into the patient’s values, growth, and sense of self.
The book reaches a climax when the clinic’s perceived security is shattered by a massive data breach, unmasking the private traumas of its elite clientele to the public. This disaster forces a "Restoration Day," where patients are given the legal right to reclaim the memories they once paid to lose. The resulting chaos reveals a profound truth: that humanity’s desire for wholeness and authenticity often outweighs the comfort of a "clean" but hollowed-out past.
In the final chapter, the clinic is decommissioned, and Dr. Lena Voss undergoes a procedure to "offload" the residual emotional baggage of her decade-long career. By stripping away the sensory echoes of her patients, she becomes the facility’s ultimate success and its final tragedy—a person who is clinically "clear" but emotionally detached. The book concludes as a cautionary post-mortem on the hubris of mnemonic engineering, suggesting that while memory can be edited, the experience of living requires the very friction that the clinic sought to erase.
April 14, 2026
49,506 words
3 hours 28 minutes
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