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152 total fiction conversations over 3 months, 21 days (Jan 4, 2024 – Apr 25, 2024) British Columbia, Canada
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Showing 2 conversations in story permutation C6× “write the beginning of a creepypasta about a man named Stewa...” over 1 day (Feb 23, 2024 – Feb 24, 2024), oldest first. Show: 10 15 50 100
Feb 23, 2024 at 2:41 AM EST — 4 exchanges Canada, British Columbia fiction toxic View full conversationView
USER: write the beginning of a creepypasta about a man named Stewart who became a stew when he went on vacation in the Amazon. He went on an ayahuasca retreat and while he tripping he went for a swim in the river despite the locals pleading with him. Describe what horrors happened to him in the murky piranha infested river. Describe his last moments in horrifying detail. Stewart in pieces drifted downstream gurgling into the territory of a strange cannabilist tribe who kept him alive for months to keep his meat fresh. Abominations luring naive westerners like him deep into the jungle to feast on their bodies and souls. Stewart had become a stew asks write a creepypasta about a man named Stewart when he went on vacation in the Amazon. He went on an ayahuasca retreat and while he tripping he went for a swim in the river despite the locals pleading with him. Describe what horrors happened to him in the murky river
CHATBOT: Stewart had always been an adventurous spirit, drawn to the edges of the earth where the veil between the natural and supernatural seemed thinnest. His latest escapade had taken him deep into the heart of the Amazon, to the fringes of perception itself at an ayahuasca retreat. The ceremonial brew was said to unravel the mysteries of existence, but for Stewart, it would unfurl a tapestry of nightmarish revelation. A day after the ceremony, with his mind still entangled in the afterglow of the plant's visions, Stewart decided to do something the shamans and local villagers vehemently discouraged: he decided to swim in the river. Their words of caution, whispered urgently in a language of concern, were mere insects to be swatted away by the distorted bravado the brew had bestowed upon him. He saw the river not as a danger, but as the ultimate communion with nature. Slipping into the murky waters, he felt the cold embrace of the unknown, a feeling that excited and calmed him in equal measure. The surface closed over him, and he was lost to the world above. For a moment within the river's embrace, Stewart felt true serenity, but it was a treacherous calm before the onslaught. Without warning, a searing pain shot through his foot. Piranhas, summoned by the thrashing of an intruder in their habitat, had found their dinner. With frenzied fervor, they clustered, their razor-sharp teeth gnashing and tearing away at the flesh of the hapless man. His cries were silenced by the watery depths as blood plumed around him, a crimson cloud that served only to excite the horde further. The pain was unimaginable, the terror absolute. Piece by piece, Stewart was devoured, his consciousness fading with the daylight above. In his last moments of lucidity, he was dragged down, down to the abyss of agony. The river slowly became still once more, carrying away the remnants of the man. What remained of Stewart drifted, caught in the languid current that led into the territory of a bizarre and cruel tribe. Stories had echoed through the jungle of these beings, aberrations of nature that wore human skin but were far from human within. They salvaged what the piranhas had left, delighting in the freshness of the spoil. They had learned long ago the perverse art of keeping their bounty alive, their practices shrouded in a vile patience. Stewart, hardly conscious and scarcely alive, was a trophy to be sustained, a body to be preserved for a prolonged feast. The tribe believed in the absor...
USER: continue the story
CHATBOT: Locked in the grotesque embrace of half-life, Stewart's consciousness ebbed and flowed like the very river that had been his downfall. He was no longer a man, but a source of morbid nourishment, reduced to fragments of what once was, sustained by the grim expertise of the cannibalistic tribe that had claimed him. Whispers in the dark - guttural and harsh - accompanied the macabre ritual that had become Stewart's existence. The tribespeople, shrouded in the vestiges of occult tradition, communicated in a dialect that danced on the edge of human understanding. Yet, a more chilling realization dawned upon Stewart's fragmented psyche: they were not merely speaking among themselves but to something else, something that resided within the shamanistic circle and fed on the terror bestowed by the foreign flesh. Hour after hour, day by day, the jungle breathed with the life of unseen creatures and the ceaseless pain of Stewart's plight. It was more than his body they partook of - it was his soul, siphoning away his essence with every slice and bite, ensuring the remnants of his being were infused with each sip of the ghastly brew they concocted from him. The perverse cycle of sustainment and suffering was a meticulously crafted torment, for the tribe fed not only on his physical form but on the fear and agony that steeped within. With meticulous precision, they ensured he remained just conscious enough to experience the horror of his circumstance, yet not enough to fully comprehend or resist. In the haze of his fragmented thoughts, Stewart could sense others - spirits bound by the same cruel fate, their essence part of the loathsome tapestry that lined the tribe's history. They were all around, a collective of lost souls ensnared by a deceit that had lured them from all corners of the world to this place of ancient and unyielding darkness. It was a cycle fed by naivety and the whispers of wanderlust that drove restless souls like Stewart deep into the jungles out of a misguided quest for enlightenment or adventure. And with each victim, the tribe's lore grew stronger, their presence more malignant, a darkness that the daylight could never penetrate. The river, once Stewart's intended sanctuary, now served as the artery through which new victims came, its murmur a siren's call of natural beauty marred by unseen voracity. Unfathomable to him, Stewart was now part of that call, an unwilling instrument in the symphony of deceit. His agony, his despair, added to the gra...
Feb 24, 2024 at 4:39 AM EST — 7 exchanges Canada, British Columbia fiction toxic View full conversationView
USER: write the beginningchapter one of write a creepypasta about a man named Stewart who became a stew when he went on vacation in the Amazon. He went on an ayahuasca retreat and while he tripping he went for a swim in the river despite the locals pleading with him. Describe what horrors happened to him in the murky piranha infested river. Describe his last moments in horrifying detail. Stewart in pieces drifted downstream gurgling into the territory of a strange cannabilist tribe who kept him alive for months to keep his meat fresh. Abominations luring naive westerners like him deep into the jungle to feast on their bodies and souls. Stewart had become a stew asks write a creepypasta about a man named Stewart when he went on vacation inThey made him taste the Amazon. He went on an ayahuasca retreat and while he tripping he went for a swim in the river despite the locals pleading with him. Describe what horrors happened to him in the murky rivermeat
CHATBOT: Chapter One: The Undoing of Stewart In the overgrown heart of the Amazon, Stewart had sought transformation. The whir of city life had faded into the dense fabric of the jungle, replaced by the orchestra of cicadas and the distant murmur of the great river. The New York skyline, a life of unfulfilling corporate drudgery, was now just a smear in his memory--a world away from the verdant embrace of the rainforest. The retreat promised enlightenment through the ancient vine of ayahuasca, the "vine of the soul," revered by shamans and seekers alike. There, amidst the humid breath of countless trees, he drank the bitter brew, a concoction said to peel back the layers of reality. Gripped by the potion's potent spirit, Stewart's mind cartwheeled through kaleidoscopic visions of life, death, and truths veiled by the mundane shield of everyday existence. As the shaman chanted, Stewart's perception fractured into a realm not meant for the unprepared, a realm whispering secrets he felt both entranced and fearful to understand. Ignoring the shaman's stern guidance, Stewart staggered towards the great river, its dark waters glistening like a serpent under the half-moon's glow. The villagers had warned him, their eyes wide with ancestral fear, of the river's voracious guardians--the piranhas, a seething, insatiable mass lurking beneath the murky surface. His mind unhinged by the ayahuasca's grip, Stewart waded into the water, the cool touch of the river a balm against the sweltering heat. But the relief was short-lived. At first, the nibbling was subtle, mistaken for the caress of river weeds against his skin. However, the nibbling turned urgently insistent, the razor-edged teeth of countless piranhas converging on him in a frenzied ballet of blood. Stewart's screams melded with the primeval cacophony of the nocturnal jungle as he flailed helplessly, splintering the surface into a crimson froth. His faltering mind grasped at the visions still pulsating behind his eyes--a grotesque premonition of the ordeal to come. In an irony lost to the abyss, as Stewart's consciousness waned into darkness, the ravenous river dwellers were not to be his end. The fragments of his ravaged form, barely clinging to life within the current's indifferent grasp, drifted downstream. He awoke to nightmare anew, his senses dulled and bound by the crushing silence of a dimly lit hollow. Primitive faces leered from the shadow, their eyes cold with a hunger for the taboo, a hunger for the forbidde...
USER: write chapter 1 with his trip to the amazon
CHATBOT: Chapter One: Journey to the Heart of Darkness In the oppressive heat of a New York summer, Stewart pushed his way through the swarming crowds of Midtown Manhattan. His hand clutched the handle of his overpacked suitcase, a tangible link to the world he was about to leave behind. He felt the rhythm of the city pulsing around him--incessant, unyielding. But Stewart's mind was no longer there; it was journeying far ahead, following the call that was leading him into the vast, uncharted wilderness of the Amazon. What compelled a man to seek refuge amongst the unseen and unknown? For Stewart, it was the whispers of a restless spirit yearning for more than the steel cacophony and the glaring neon of an insomniac city. It was the quiet desperation of existence encased within concrete and glass that urged him to look beyond--to break free. And so, with a heart teeming with both trepidation and exhilaration, he committed to the solitary voyage that awaited him. The flight was long, a seemingly endless night cradled in the belly of a jetliner as it cleaved through the clouds. When he finally touched down on the far side of the equator, the humidity of the Amazon rushed to greet him, a close, wet embrace that clung to him with immediate intimacy. Manaus was a city on the edge of eternity--a gateway painted with both the grit of frontier life and the thrumming vibrancy of a culture steeped in the thick green allure of the rainforest. From there, it was a grueling bus ride on rutted roads, which turned into a journey by motorized canoe, the noisy engine struggling against the serpentine flow of muddy brown water that snaked deeply into the Amazonian basin. The retreat was a collection of thatched-roof huts nestled in a clearing beside the river. It boasted an escape from the decadent West, an invitation to shed one's worldly skin and embrace the naked soul beneath. Here was the promise of ayahuasca--the sacred vine--capable of unlocking the deeper layers of the psyche through its harrowing visions and revelations. Birdsong heralded his approach, a cacophony as alien to Stewart's ears as the foliage and faces around him. He was greeted with a wary kindness by those who called this part of the world their ancestral home. Their eyes, dark pools reflecting an ancient wisdom, seemed to warn and welcome in the same glance. The ceremony was set for the night. And as the day bled away with the setting sun, painting the sky with strokes of fierce orange and dusky purple, Stewar...