The great thing about memes is that there’s one for pretty much every mood and interest. Need something completely random? Easy. Looking for animal memes or painfully relatable posts about anxiety? The internet has plenty.
But today, we have a collection of a different kind. We gathered some really weird and chaotic memes from the Instagram page Federal Meme Bureau. So if your sense of humor is hanging on by its last brain cell, you’re in the right place.
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Memes have been a part of internet culture for as long as most of us can remember. They’ve been making us laugh, helping us cope, and giving us something to send to friends at 2 a.m. for years.
When they first started gaining traction, though, they looked very different than they do now. Usually, it was something like a funny photo or an animal with a bold caption at the top and a punchline at the bottom. They were pretty straightforward, and you didn’t need to be chronically online to get them.
My wife, folks. If I don’t text her back in 0.5 seconds I must not love her.
As time went on, though, they’ve become weirder, more self-referential, and harder to explain. A single meme could be just one word, but to actually get it, you might need to know three other memes and maybe a TV show that went viral.
For an outsider, a lot of modern memes can genuinely seem like a fever dream. Like something a slightly unhinged person conjured up in their sleep. Honestly, many of the ones on this list fit that description perfectly.
A big reason for that change is social media. Platforms like TikTok and Instagram have sped up how fast memes are created and spread.
A lot of today’s memes are also deeply tied to internet subcultures, so you often need insider knowledge to fully get them. As a result, what you end up with is content that’s increasingly absurd.
A prime example is the rise of brain rot. Usually made with strange AI images, edited to loud background music in a way that’s distracting and doesn’t make much sense, but designed to keep your attention.
Think Ballerina Cappuccina and Tung Tung Tung Tung Tung Sahur.
The worst thing is that no one tells you when you get to college, you have to take all the stupid same c**p you just finished in high school. 2 years of prerequisites....English, History, Science, Math, etc etc etc Like seriously? I can't pick what interests me and I can't take anything in my actual major till junior year???
Sir Isaac Newton - "I like 'em thicc." Scribe - "But, Sir Isaac, we can't write that!" Newton - "Then write this: The greater the mass, the greater the force of attraction."
In fact, the term “brain rot” was selected as the Word of the Year by Oxford University Press in 2024, beating out other meme-born words like “lore,” “demure,” and “slop.” In 2023, it was “rizz.” And in 2025, the title went to “rage bait,” which beat out “aura farming.”
All of these words sound pretty strange when you see them listed out like that, but they say a lot about how deeply internet culture has seeped into everyday language.
Risking a whoosh: I'll take a wild guess, but with "time to count pulse", "time of exercise" and possibly "heart rate" it seems to be health related test paper, and "breathing" is a pretty obvious health indicator that OP forgot to list.
FWIW, it looks like it might be raining and the bench is out in the open while he's somewhat protected by the house he's crouching in front of.
Probably the peak of meme nonsense as of late has been 67 (pronounced as six-seeeeven). If you’re already tired of it, sorry for bringing it to your screen.
But it’s become so widespread that Dictionary.com named it the word of the year in 2025. At this point, it’s everywhere. Online, offline, across continents.
You could be traveling in a completely different corner of the world, in some remote village, and if you walked past a group of kids or young adults, you could just say six seven.
Chances are, they’d scream it right back at you, complete with the hand motion that’s now practically universal.
My dad would offer to punch me in the arm so I would forget about the leg.
What makes 67 interesting is that it doesn’t actually mean anything. Other viral phrases or memes at least have something behind them. Even Tung Tung Tung Sahur, as weird as he sounds, is a character you can point to and explain.
But 67 has nothing. It just exists.
It did come from somewhere, though. It started with the song “Doot Doot (6 7)” by Skrilla, where the lyrics “6-7” are repeated throughout. From there, it blew up on TikTok and Instagram, especially through edits tied to sports footage.
Or, in my case, reading a Bored Panda collection of 52 Weird Memes That Somehow Get Better The More You Look At Them.
There’s actually something kind of beautiful about 67 and all the other nonsensical memes out there. What experts are finding is that they serve a real social function.
A 2024 article published in the International Journal of Communication explains how meaningless internet phrases actually help build community and signal belonging. They help people figure out who gets the joke and who doesn’t.
“Language is a way for people to form community,” Gail Fairhurst, a University of Cincinnati professor who teaches leadership communication, told CNN. “Even if it’s a nonsense term, if they seem to know what it means, that can be a unifying force.”
So whether you fully understand the memes on this list or they just look like pure chaos to you, that’s kind of the point. They’re weird and they don’t always make sense.
But if they made you laugh, even just a little, then you’re already in on the joke. And if they didn’t, well, give it a week. There’s always another meme around the corner that will.
This does beg a question: When does it stop being a "polyamorous relationship" and start being a neighbourhood swinger club?
Anyone who doesn’t want to hear Alice In Chains isn’t worth knowing.
If I never see another one of those yellow f*****s for the rest of my life it will be too f*****g soon. Did someone form a committee to figure out how to create the most painfully irritating entities ever known to mankind?
