Im Actually At My Emotional Capacity
Also known as: I'm At Capacity · Emotional Labor Text Template · Emotional Capacity Copypasta
"I'm Actually at My Emotional Capacity" is a copypasta meme that originated from a November 2019 Twitter thread by writer and feminist educator Melissa A. Fabello, who shared a fill-in-the-blank text template for turning down a friend's request for emotional support. The template's clinical, almost corporate tone struck people as hilariously cold, and Twitter users quickly turned it into a meme by inserting the scripted reply into absurd and inappropriate contexts.
TL;DR
"I'm Actually at My Emotional Capacity" is a copypasta meme that originated from a November 2019 Twitter thread by writer and feminist educator Melissa A.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The standard approach is to take the full template text and insert it where an emotionally warm response would normally go. Common setups include:
- A screenshot of a desperate text from a friend, partner, or family member, followed by the template as the reply - Using the "if she's your girl then why did she text me..." format leading into the template - Applying it to non-emotional contexts (professors, bosses, customer service, pets) for absurd contrast - Editing recognizable characters or fictional figures to appear to be sending the message (Clippy, movie villains, cartoon characters)
The humor typically comes from the mismatch between someone clearly needing human connection and receiving what feels like a corporate out-of-office bounce-back.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Fabello's original thread was 17 tweets long, but only the template screenshot at the end went viral.
The Daily Dot pointed out that a simple "I don't have time for your shit" would have gotten the same message across with less corporate flair.
Multiple users compared the template to an out-of-office email auto-responder and an automated customer service message.
The phrase "hold appropriate space" became a particular lightning rod, with people mocking it as therapy-speak gone too far.
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
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