There is a special kind of dread reserved for the moment a small, polite pop-up informs you that your password has expired. It’s not just an inconvenience; it’s an invitation to a logic puzzle designed by a committee that has never met, but unanimously decided they dislike you. Welcome to the absurd theater of password requirements.
The Ever-Shifting Goalposts of Security
It starts simply enough. “Must be 8 characters.” Fine. “Must contain a number.” Okay, `Hunter2` it is. But then, the rules start to multiply like digital rabbits. Suddenly, you’re staring at a list of demands that would make a hostage negotiator sweat.
- Must contain an uppercase letter, a lowercase letter, and a number.
- Must contain a special character from the approved list of hieroglyphs (`!@#$%` but not `^`, because that’s apparently too spicy).
- Cannot be one of your last 12 passwords, a list which your brain helpfully deleted from its cache memory two years ago.
- Cannot contain any part of your username, your actual name, or any word found in a standard dictionary.
- Must be changed every 90 days, ensuring you will forget it precisely 91 days from now.
The Glorious, Fleeting Moment of Success
After 15 minutes of furious typing and increasingly creative profanity, you finally craft it: `J$p!t3rL!ghtn1ng`. A password so secure, so complex, that even *you* can’t remember it five seconds after you’ve typed it into the “Confirm New Password” field. You’ve done it. You have achieved peak security. You are impenetrable. You immediately write it on a sticky note and slap it on your monitor, the digital equivalent of locking your front door and leaving the key in it. The system works.

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