You thought it was just a dumb T-shirt. Then you couldn’t stop counting. Two holes. No, four. Wait… six? Suddenly a “narcissist test” meme had you doubting your own logic. That bright orange shirt, ripped and ragged, turned into a battlefield between what you see,
what you assume, and what you’ve always believed about your own mind. You stared, recalculated, argued with yourself — and maybe with the comments.
Because this wasn’t really about fashion. It was about how your brain builds reality from a few torn thr… Continues…
The T-shirt puzzle works because it sneaks past your defenses. You’re not told, “Here’s a cognitive test.” You’re teased with a joke about narcissism, thrown into a simple-looking image, and left alone with your assumptions.
Do you only count the obvious rips? Do you remember the neck, sleeves, and bottom? Do you imagine unseen holes on the back? Each answer quietly reveals how you filter information before you even know you’re doing it.
That’s why six holes feels so satisfying: it honors both what’s visible and what’s implied. But the real value isn’t “getting it right” — it’s noticing your own process. You glimpse how quickly your mind turns fragments into certainty, how easily others land somewhere different, and how none of you are necessarily wrong.
In a world that rewards instant takes, one torn orange T-shirt becomes a tiny invitation to slow down, look again, and accept that other people’s “obvious” might never match your own.