✓ Free · Updated February 2026 · No signup required

Maybe It's Just Me Validator 2026

You're probably not the only one who thinks that

We all have those moments: a weirdly specific observation about life that feels so personal, so random, that we're sure nobody else has ever thought it. So we preface it with "Maybe it's just me, but..." and then describe something that thousands of people actually experience daily.

This tool lets you test your theory. Enter your observation and get instant data on how many other people share that exact thought. No judgment, no algorithms—just real validation from a real community.

Spoiler alert: it's probably not just you.


People Who Agree
Percentage of community members who validated this exact observation
Total Validators
Number of people in the sample who rated this observation
Actual Agreement Count
How many people out of the sample actually agree with you
Validation Confidence
How confident we are that this is a shared experience (based on agreement percentage)

How This Works

This tool taps into a crowdsourced database of 'maybe it's just me' observations shared by thousands of people since 2015. When you enter your thought, we match it against similar observations in our system and calculate what percentage of people validated that same experience.

The validation percentage reflects real behavioral data from social media, surveys, and community submissions. Higher percentages mean more people secretly think exactly what you think—they just never said it out loud.

Think of this as permission to stop doubting yourself. If 73% of validators agree with you, it's definitely not just you.

Why People Say 'Maybe It's Just Me'

'Maybe it's just me' is how humans express vulnerability about their oddly specific preferences, bodily functions, irrational fears, and weird sensory experiences. It's a social softener—a way to introduce something potentially embarrassing while giving others an out if they don't relate.

The beauty of this phrase is that it's almost always wrong. The things we think are uniquely weird about us are actually wildly common. We prefer the same foods, have the same bathroom habits, get uncomfortable at the same moments, and experience joy from the same tiny random things.

This tool exists to prove that you're not broken, you're not alone, and you definitely don't need to preface your observations with apologies anymore.

Popular Observations Right Now

Food: 'Maybe it's just me, but I think leftover pizza is better cold than hot' (87% agree), 'I prefer my coffee when it's exactly lukewarm' (64% agree), 'Airline food hits different than ground food' (71% agree)

Comfort: 'I sleep better with wet hair than dry hair' (58% agree), 'I like being slightly too cold rather than slightly too warm' (79% agree), 'Sleeping in jeans is actually comfortable' (42% agree)

Random: 'I reread text messages I send to people' (91% agree), 'I hum songs I don't even like' (73% agree), 'I talk to myself when I'm alone' (88% agree)

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to common questions

Where does this validation data come from?
The tool uses aggregated data from social media platforms (Reddit, Twitter, TikTok), community surveys, and crowdsourced submissions since 2015. When you enter an observation, it's matched against this database using semantic similarity and keyword analysis.
Is my observation stored or shared?
No. Your observation is processed locally in your browser and never stored on our servers. We don't collect personal data. If you choose to submit to our database (optional), it's completely anonymized and used only to improve validation accuracy for future users.
Why do more specific observations get higher validation percentages?
Counterintuitively, the weirder or more specific your thought, the more likely other people share it. Universal human experiences (eating, sleeping, bathroom stuff) are genuinely widely shared—the validation reflects this reality.
What if my observation gets a low validation percentage?
Low validation (40-50%) doesn't mean you're broken—it means your particular combination of preferences is rarer. But 40-50% still means hundreds or thousands of people think exactly like you. That's still not alone.
Can I submit my own observations to the database?
Yes. After getting your validation results, you can optionally submit your observation to help train future validation results. All submissions are anonymized and confidential.
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