Message from Mobile Task Force Omega-0 ("Ará Orún") Document Manager Melinda Williams
If you are reading this, you have either just died, or are at a point in time where you should be contemplating your demise.
First, I'll address the newcomers.
The deceased members of Ará Orún manage a lot of information that the living cannot or should not know. Sadly, even in death, we are not eternal. Some of us lose our personal information as it disappears (if you don't want that to happen to you, I recommend Identity Warfare Training). As such, we record information that only the dead know in places that you'll die after reading. If you've got important information, write it down. The pages only the dead can see start with SCP-2111, and other pages exist throughout the SCP database. Ignore the security warnings and read whatever you feel like.
Also, SCP-3393-JP, described here, isn't really important information. You must have been wondering because they grow everywhere, but to us dead people, it's common and harmless.
But personally I don't think this is something the living should know about.
And for the others, those of you who care about your own death. I wish you peace in your second journey.
Now, for the saints who protect us, go ahead and keep reading.
Item #: SCP-3393-JP
Object Class: Ticonderoga
Special Containment Procedures: SCP-3393-JP is thought to be uncontainable. However, it is very unlikely to affect the existing noosphere, and is imperceptible to the living, and so does not need to be contained. However, personnel are to avoid approaching areas where the anomaly is densely present due to the risks of personality loss. Similarly, personnel are to monitor and guide the living away from these infestations.
Description: SCP-3393-JP is a type of flower with strong antimemetic properties. They primarily manifest as golden-rayed lilies (Lilium auratum) or forget-me-nots (Myosotis scorpioides), and grow in all conditions throughout the world. However, due to their strong antimemetic nature, they cannot be noticed by almost all humans, and their effects on the senses as well as their physical weight and occlusion are effectively nonexistent for the living.
In order to view SCP-3393-JP, personnel must either consume Class Z mnestics, be in a near-death state, or have full memetic immunity through death. In most cases, personnel who recover from their near-death state forget the existence of SCP-3393-JP due to its antimemetic nature; occasional cases of vague memories have been recorded. The image of the so-called "afterlife" may be affected by SCP-3393-JP.
While SCP-3393-JP's habitat is typically independent of conditions required for ordinary plant life, their density is strongly correlated with personality loss in the dead. They are most dense near Site-41 and Site-167, where large-scale personality loss incidents have occurred, almost entirely burying the Sites. Although population density varies, it has been confirmed that SCP-3393-JP is located throughout the human habitable zone. As such, it is thought that SCP-3393-JP manifests from deceased personality loss.
As it is possible to confirm the connection between SCP-3393-JP's manifestation and locations where deceased personality loss occurs, SCP-3393-JP is very likely to be the "corpse" of a lost personality. However, it has not been confirmed that the lost personality continues to exist within SCP-3393-JP. In addition, it is unknown what personality an individual SCP-3393-JP corresponds to.
Addendum: While it is thought that the chance of SCP-3393-JP's existence being noticed by the living is extremely low, during SCP-001 events, SCP-3393-JP's existence is hinted. If a large-scale cluster of sapiences were to die due to some K-class scenario, there is a possibility that SCP-3393-JP will "appear out of nowhere" in the perception of the remaining sapiences. It is thought that in such extreme cases, it is likely that a large amount of the deceased would rapidly lose their personalities and thus a large portion of the Earth's surface would be covered in SCP-3393-JP, leading to the situation described in the proposal.