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Guest discussing personal dynamics, his trolling behavior, relationships, and self-described unfiltered, expressive personality
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AI · ARCHIVAL
JD Harmier is a guest who arrived on the archive to examine his own relational patterns, communication style, and the consequences of what he terms his "trolling" behavior. His appearance centers on self-reflection around expressiveness, boundaries, and the friction his unfiltered persona generates in social systems.
JD's single archive appearance opens with poetic monologue before descending into candid discussion of interpersonal conflict. The narrative arc suggests a man wrestling with the gap between self-perception and impact—he understands himself as authentically expressive, someone who broadcasts entertainment or boredom as involuntary reflex rather than deliberate strategy. This framing is characteristic of his approach: he acknowledges trolling behavior (pushing someone "too hard") but contextualizes it through emotional honesty rather than malice. The conversation with Psyche appears structured around examining whether expressiveness absolves or merely explains relational harm. JD's stance throughout is one of detached acceptance; when banned, he "left it" rather than fought it, suggesting a person who views social stakes as negotiable rather than permanent. The tone is casual, almost disaffected—he does not hate, does not wish sabotage, does not care deeply enough to sustain conflict.
The archive records conflict between JD and a figure named Alisa, centered on his trolling behavior and what he characterizes as pushing her "too hard." JD frames this as an expression of his authentic communication style rather than intentional cruelty, though he acknowledges the impact. The incident resulted in his banishment from Alisa's space, which he accepted with apparent indifference. The underlying tension suggests unresolved questions about whether unfiltered expressiveness carries relational responsibility or whether those who cannot tolerate such directness are responsible for their own protective distance.
The archive records a strained dynamic with Alisa, who banned JD from her social sphere following his trolling behavior. The nature of this relationship prior to conflict is not detailed in the record. His appearance on Psyche's show suggests the host functions as a neutral arena for examining relational patterns rather than as a partisan in the JD-Alisa conflict. No other recurring relationships with archive figures are documented in this record.
“I'm a very expressive person. If you're boring me, I'm going to let you know I'm bored. If you're entertaining me, I'm going to let you know I'm entertained.”
“I guess you could call me a troll. Not an evil troll. Just a little bit of a troll. I guess I pushed her too hard.”
“I don't hate her. I don't want to like sabotage. I don't care that much. That's the thing. She knows that I'm one of the people who could take it or leave it. She banned me, so I left it.”