Digital Myotonia Report
“The condition is not only somatic. It is archival. The system records delayed release in the body and delayed release in memory as if they now belonged to the same disorder.”
This bulletin belongs to a cluster of diagnostic materials where somatic description and archival language begin crossing into one another. The report is clinically restrained, yet it implies a world in which bodily persistence and mnemonic persistence can no longer be kept conceptually separate.
The phrase digital myotonia becomes important less as a settled diagnosis than as a sign of convergence. Institutions are discovering that delayed release, pattern lock, and continuity failure are appearing across domains once treated as unrelated.
The condition is not only somatic. It is archival.
The report survives because it records medicine straining to describe a disorder that is already larger than medicine.