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* Also somewhat PlayedForLaughs in ''WebAnimation/BattleForDreamIsland Again'': after Puffball removes Pin's limbs, Ice Cube removes his ''face'', making him just a regular old inanimate pin. And he's still alive after that, with the closest he can communicate with others being with the ooze he sweats. At least by the time this happens we already know that Pin will eventually have both his limbs and face back during IDFB.

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* Also somewhat PlayedForLaughs in ''WebAnimation/BattleForDreamIsland Again'': ''WebAnimation/BattleForDreamIslandAgain'': after Puffball removes Pin's limbs, Ice Cube removes his her ''face'', making him her just a regular old inanimate pin. And he's she's still alive after that, with the closest he she can communicate with others being with the ooze he she sweats. At least by the time this happens we already know that Pin will eventually have both his her limbs and face back during IDFB.
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* ''WebAnimation/TheAmazingDigitalCircus'' is heavily inspired by and shares its basic premise with the TropeNamer [[Literature/IHaveNoMouthAndIMustScream story]], though mostly has this [[PlayedForLaughs played for]] ([[BlackComedy darkly comedic]]) [[PlayedForLaughs laughs]]. The one instance where it is treated seriously is the danger of getting "[[EldritchTransformation Abstracted]]", wherein the victim has become so overcome by despair and grief over their situation that [[spoiler:they completely lose their sense of self and become a mindless, glitch spreading beast. This cannot be reverted, not even by the [[GodsHandsAreTied AI controlling the simulation]], so they get thrown into the [[SealedRoomInTheMiddleOfNowhere cellar]] and never released.]]


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* Also somewhat PlayedForLaughs in ''WebAnimation/BattleForDreamIsland Again'': after Puffball removes Pin's limbs, Ice Cube removes his ''face'', making him just a regular old inanimate pin. And he's still alive after that, with the closest he can communicate with others being with the ooze he sweats. At least by the time this happens we already know that Pin will eventually have both his limbs and face back during IDFB.
* ''WebAnimation/DeathBattle'': There's a couple of times where death is preferable to the fate that the loser endures.
** ComicBook/{{Ultron}} rewrites his opponent's AI, [[VideoGame/MegaManX Sigma]], into being nothing than an extension of his will.
** ComicBook/{{Thanos}} vs. ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} has [[spoiler:the former gets what is undoubtedly the worst fate in the series: being killed and trapped in the [[GroundhogDayLoop Omega Sanction]], to relive countless and increasingly humiliating lives and deaths forever. His wish to truly die and be with [[TheGrimReaper Lady Death]] doesn't help]].
* ''WebAnimation/FTLKestrelAdventures'':
** If you look very closely after Riccado damages the FTL drive mid-flight, you can see that the crew of the Kestrel are made to relive the worst experiences of their lives. Jose and Riccado see their mom leaving, Pavallo sees the federation/mantia war, Cremity sees his friends die in the station he was found in, etc.
** Also possibly the fate of [[spoiler:General Teidrich and Key as they were mind raped and incorporated into Sai 1's hive mind, forced to undertake actions of evil against their friends. We see this in later episodes, where Teidrich's mind is represented by a mouthless version of himself floating in space, unable to do anything while Sai-1 gloats and steals his body, thereby making this a very literal example.]]
* ''WebAnimation/HappyTreeFriends'':
** In "Blast From The Past", Sniffles accidentally causes an eternal time-loop of himself, Lumpy, Cuddles, Giggles, and Toothy dying over and over again.
** In "Tongue Twister Trouble", Sniffles gets frozen alive.
** In "House Warming", Petunia is reduced to a burnt bloody mush that can barely even move.
** In "By The Seat Of Your Pants", Handy (who already lost both of his arms), gets his legs chopped off by Fliqpy, rendering him immobile.
** In "Dream Job", Lumpy inadvertently tortures Sniffles by flipping through various channels of the TV attached to his dream helmet, forcing him to go through numerous deaths until he overpowers the TV and [[HeroicBSOD renders him catatonic]].
* ''WebAnimation/IfPokedexEntriesWereLiteral'': In ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=waKgonBRsZ0 If Pokédex Entries Were EVEN MORE Literal]]'', someone who is burned by the flames a Houndoom shoots from its mouth feels the pain forever. Sure enough, a Squirtle is burned in such a way and is shown to be screaming in agony '''seventy years later!'''
--> '''Squirtle's Trainer (as an old man)''': [[LackOfEmpathy Will you just SHUT UP!?]]
* ''WebAnimation/MyStoryAnimated'':
** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fynUqrvzNY&t=2s "I have been in a coma for years,]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmAyU6_Cxn4 i could hear everything"]] is about a girl named Ariana who ends up in a coma-like state for several years. Even though she's still conscious and can still hear everything around her, she can't move or speak.
** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0BML1hbqQM "I Woke Up during Surgery. The Doctors Ignored Me!"]] is about a girl named Sarah who experiences anesthesia awareness during heart surgery. Since she was given a paralytic, that meant she couldn't move, not even to scream in pain.
* ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'':
** Tex [[spoiler:would have fallen victim to this trope, her mind is imprisoned forever in an A.I capture unit. However this is subverted in that Church traps himself in the capture unit in order to [[AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther save her]] or at least be with her.]]
** How Maine ended up becoming the Meta: [[spoiler:Sigma began to corrupt him, forcing his battle strategies to become more and more primal, until all resemblance of humanity was fully eroded, leaving him a merciless killer, murdering his former allies and taking their equipment and AI fragments, all so Sigma could become the reborn Alpha.]]
** It doesn't stop there: by ''[[WebAnimation/RedVsBlueTheRecollection Reconstruction]]''[[labelnote:*]]Keep in mind that this is when the Meta had been running rampant for a year InUniverse[[/labelnote]], after Wash activates the EMP failsafe, Maine doesn't go back to normal. If anything, he becomes ''more'' psychotic and unhinged. Sigma rewrote so much of his old personality, [[ThatManIsDead power-hungry psycho is all that's left.]] Can you imagine being a servant for so long, that all you can do when your master dies is to just ''keep on serving''?
** YouWakeUpInARoom, and are forced to do calculations for fake combat scenarios. You fail every single time, being told your love had died in the process. [[spoiler:That's what happens to the Alpha. By the time Tex goes to rescue him, he doesn't even know who she is, remember his own name, what he's been doing, or why he's even there.]]
* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'': The Hound's intelligence comes with some horrifying implications. [[spoiler:The host is just ''barely'' alive, and falls into a MadnessMantra after being struck with Ruby's Silver Eyes. How much remained of the original man is unknown, but it's clear that he's suffered in ways that are difficult to comprehend and been reduced to a feral state.]]
* A deleted sequel draft of ''WebAnimation/WolfSongTheMovie'' has Kara use the stone too many times, rendering her physically incapable of death... while still processing the deaths of those closest to her poorly, resulting in her trying to end her life numerous times, with her battered body regenerating each time. There is a reason this sequel idea has been cut, as the creator would later realise it wasn't the best idea.
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A character suffers from an extremely horrifying FateWorseThanDeath. [[DrivenToSuicide Suicide]] is [[ICannotSelfTerminate not an option]]; even death never comes to free them from it. They are immobilized or otherwise contained, unable to communicate with anyone, and unlikely to be removed from this situation -- not even by death -- anytime in the foreseeable future.

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A character suffers from an extremely horrifying FateWorseThanDeath. [[DrivenToSuicide Suicide]] is a FateWorseThanDeath of the highest order. [[ICannotSelfTerminate Suicide not an option]]; even death never comes to free them from it. They are immobilized or otherwise contained, unable to communicate with anyone, and unlikely to be removed from this situation -- not even by death -- anytime in the foreseeable future.

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* AndIMustScream/VisualNovels


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[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* In ''VisualNovel/AkaiIto'', [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Nozomi]] was trapped inside the [[MagicMirror Ryugetsu]] for... a long time. Even though in other characters' route she is always a villain, when you are in her route it's explained that she was a princess of some sort, and discarded her original body to obtain freedom from the deadly political game of her era. She then became a ghost that is [[HauntedFetter attached to the Ryugetsu]]. How did she accomplish this? By making deal with [[BigBad Nushi]], which, at that time, seemed sympathetic. When Nushi was defeated and [[SealedEvilInACan sealed]] by the onikiri, she became trapped in the mirror. As she wondered why Nushi never come for her, her psyche crumbled, and out of loneliness (and low self-esteem, she's really a messed-up person) she created another persona that act as her twin little sister. [[spoiler:But that little sister, Mikage, was really a part of [[OurSoulsAreDifferent Nushi's shattered soul]], and manipulates her into manipulating the owner of the mirror to do atrocious things, all to free Nushi.]]
* The fate of the Pale Bride in ''VisualNovel/AnalogueAHateStory'', [[spoiler:after her adoptive parents cut out her tongue to keep her from arguing. While she was in stasis, the people of the ''Mugunghwa'' stopped using the Korean alphabet and can no longer read it, and she can't write the Chinese characters they use now, so she has no way of communicating with anybody anymore aside from body language. And then the only person who ever treated her with kindness after she came out of stasis dies. No wonder she snapped]].
* ''VisualNovel/DayshiftAtFreddys'': In two of the second game's endings, [[spoiler:either Dave or Old Sport are impaled by springlocks (rusty metal spikes), trapped in the blocked-off safe room, and are likely still conscious, as shown by the ending screens]].
* The final fate of [[spoiler:Tiberius]] from ''VisualNovel/{{Demonbane}}''. [[spoiler:In Al's route, he gets absorbed into the Shining Trapezohedron, forever trapped in a dimension of shrieking madness and suffering.]]
* ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'':
** In the Fate route, under the church [[spoiler:are the still living remains of the orphans from the fire that nearly destroyed the town ten years ago, turned into mana batteries for Gilgamesh by Kirei]]. Made worse by the fact that if you don't go there it's GameOver for you. Despite the protagonist actually saying that he feels a massive evil presence from the church's basement and that he should leave. This feeling has saved his and Saber's life around 5 times before, but the game designers suddenly just expect you to go against it. And the reward is BodyHorror. [[SarcasmMode Joy.]]
** And then there's the Bad End where Caster turns Shirou into a living wand for projection magecraft.
** And the Bad End where Ilya puts Shirou's soul in a doll. And the one where she carries off [[ALoveToDismember his severed but still living head]] (the very first Bad End you can get, by the way!). Really, this trope shows up with disturbing frequency.
* In ''VisualNovel/{{Nameless}} -- The One Thing You Must Recall'', [[LivingToys all dolls and stuffed animals, unbeknownst to humans, have sentience]]. However, they are still (without the influence of magic) just inanimate objects, and therefore they suffer whatever violence a careless or vindictive person might casually inflict on a toy while having no means to fight back or even indicate their distress. Additionally, they are capable of human emotions of attachment, sorrow, etc., but again, have no means of communicating them and suffer constantly at the whims of others. It's really no wonder that the cast (largely made up of magically animated toys) is such a DysfunctionJunction.
* In ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorneyTrialsAndTribulations'', the BigBad [[spoiler:Dahlia Hawthorne]] brags that about avoiding punishment for past crimes due to already being dead, seeing as how [[spoiler:she's been executed for crimes she committed years before, having come back from the dead by way of spirit channelling to get revenge]]. However, Phoenix and Mia describe the malevolent spirit's failure of the attempted crime and, because spirits live on after death, give the "ultimate punishment" of remaining a failure for all of eternity. This does the job, and ended up causing the spirit to scream in agony, before fading back into the afterlife.
-->'''Phoenix:''' ...I remember what you said earlier in the trial. You said there was no way we could punish you...because you were already dead.\\
[[spoiler:'''Dahlia''']]: What about it!?\\
'''Phoenix:''' Then you said... Even when the body dies, the spirit, the ego, it lives on... forever.\\
'''Mia:''' ...That's very true, [[spoiler:Dahlia]]. And that's exactly the punishment you'll never be able to escape from. For all of eternity, you'll have to remain as [[spoiler:Dahlia Hawthorne]]. A miserable, pathetic, weak creature who can never win at anything... And for you, there is no escape from that. No hope of freedom. Since the day you were executed... the narrow bridge that once stretched out in front of you has burnt to a crisp!
* ''VisualNovel/SlowDamage'': The fate of Towa in Fujieda's Bad Ending. [[spoiler:He has mentally broken completely and seems to be acting like his mother did in life, a manipulative, seductive, and creepy woman that could make people do whatever she wanted. But Towa himself ''is'' still present in this state, though obviously in a very held-down kind of way, with him clinging to Fujieda at one point and just barely managing to whisper out a 'Help me'. He is trapped and can't escape on his own, if at all.]]
* The only bad ending on Sigma's route in ''VisualNovel/VirtuesLastReward''. When [[spoiler:Sigma wakes up in the infirmary and finds that his cybernetic arm has been cut off with everyone else gone. Next, he screams and passes out]].
** Another thing is that, if the sensor between chromatic doors doesn't register the correct bracelets, then everyone in between said chromatic doors will be trapped forever, with the chromatic doors never opening.
* ''Franchise/WhenTheyCry'':
** [[spoiler:Rika Furude]] from ''[[VisualNovel/HigurashiWhenTheyCry Higurashi]]'' has been stuck in a GroundhogDayLoop for somewhere between a century and a millennium. In most iterations, one of her friends will [[HatePlague go insane and kill a bunch of people]]. In every iteration, [[spoiler:[[TheyKilledKennyAgain Rika is murdered]], usually [[CruelAndUnusualDeath disemboweled while she's still alive]], and most or all of her friends die within a few days. Then she's resurrected in the past, and goes through it all over again, and she's the only one who remembers what's happening, but enough important details keep changing so she is unable to stop it, and as with most examples, Rika eventually goes completely insane from it.]] In the sequel story, ''[[VisualNovel/UminekoWhenTheyCry Umineko]]'', [[spoiler:there is a new character named Frederica Bernkastel that looks heavily like Rika. It is revealed that Frederica is an amalgamation of all the hundreds or thousands of Rika's incarnations that have died horribly, forming a being aptly titled "The most cruel witch", and one of her pastimes is doing the exact same thing to other mortals that just so happened to her unwitting "creator"]].
** Also, in ''Umineko'', this is the consequence of a witch causing a Logic Error. The offending witch becomes trapped in the paradox until they can think of a way to resolve it -- or for all eternity, whichever comes first.
[[/folder]]

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[[folder: Web Animation]]
* The second episode of ''WebAnimation/BattleForBFDI'' has Taco being trapped in a giant jawbreaker. Sure, it's PlayedForLaughs, but imagine being cramped up in a small cage with no light, contact with anyone or any chance of escape. She even [[AutoCannibalism eats part of herself to survive]].
[[/folder]]



* AndIMustScream/OtherMedia


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!!Other examples:
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[[folder:Animation]]
* ''Animation/GypsyTales'': Near the end of "The Gypsy Woman and the Devil", Vunida is transformed into a fully conscious, immobile tree. When her children pass by her in tree form, all she can do is to silently cry.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Audio Plays]]
* In Radio/AdventuresInOdyssey when Mr. Whitaker made a program to simulate the afterlife in The Mortal Coil, Eugine, who was not a believer at the time disobeyed Tom Riley and used the program after him. Unfortunately for him, as it is a Christian franchise, the program simulated the afterlife of the individual based on the Bible. So while Mr. Whitaker was in a coma dreaming about heaven, Eugene was unfortunately not a believer at the time, and Mr. Whitaker made his program far more Biblically accurate then fire and brimstone. He recounts his adventure to his co-worker Connie as follows:
--> [[TheNothingAfterDeath "It-it was the most horrifying thing I've ever experienced. I've never felt such loneliness or isolation. It was as if I was completely separated from everyone and everything: completely and thoroughly alone. Not as though I was off by myself somewhere, but-but as though I were non-existent in a black void of solitude. I was alone Connie. Utterly alone in a burning blackness and I've had nothing but nightmares since then."]]
** To Mr. Whitaker's credit, he would not have intended for anyone to experience Hell, and the episode ends with him realizing that making the program was a terrible idea.
* In ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'', the final regeneration of [[spoiler: The Eleven]] is treated this way. As they lay writhing in pain with Artron energy, scrambling to find the MacGuffin of the story which would preserve them as they are, they end up regenerating regardless [[spoiler: forcing the Eleven to be a voice in the head of the next regeneration the Twelve, doomed to be stuck with the voices he's been stuck with their entire lives]]. They break down upon realising this.
* The ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'' Unbound story, "He Jests at Scars..." features an alternate version of "The Trial of a Time Lord", where the Valeyard triumphs over the Sixth Doctor and gains the Doctor's remaining regenerations and his TARDIS. He goes on to create havoc across the universe, with massive consequences, even accidentally killing the First and Fourth Doctors and severely damaging the web of time. In the end, the damage is so severe that the Valeyard considers himself so dangerous to everything, that any action he takes would cause more harm. Since he is symbiotically linked the TARDIS, it responds by sitting in the middle of the time vortex with the Valeyard and Mel trapped onboard in an illusionary world. However, the power runs out and the illusion fades to reveal the two trapped in the console room by forcefields, unable to move, and soon, according to the Valeyard, unable to talk. However, since the Valeyard and the TARDIS are symbiotically linked, neither can die until the other dies, and both are keeping the other alive, and by extension Mel alive, for all eternity.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fairy Tales]]
* Creator/HansChristianAndersen's "Literature/TheGirlWhoTrodOnTheLoaf": The title character is punished for her vanity by becoming a statue in Hell. She's able to hear everything being said about her by the living.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* This is the fate of the astronauts in "Pioneers Over C" by {{Music/VanDerGraafGenerator}}:
-->''Doomed to vanish in the flickering light\\
disappearing to a darker night\\
doomed to vanish in a living death\\
living antimatter, anti-breath''
* "Hyperspace Cryogenic Insomnia Blues" by Music/TomSmith, in which the singer is awake during his cryogenic sleep.
-->We're two weeks out of Terran orbit\\
Ten years left to go...
* This seems to be the fate of ''Music/{{Gloryhammer}}'s'' immortal BigBad Zargothrax when he's trapped in liquid ice (?) at the end of the first album. In the fourth album, he's released by his clone in an alternative timeline and describes his imprisonment as "decades of torment". In the original timeline, he was frozen for a ''thousand'' years before being released by the Chaos Wizards in the second album. It probably doesn't have much of an effect on his psychology -- aside from a brief comical glimpse of his origins in "Keeper of the Celestial Flame of Abernethy", he's always shown as a CardCarryingVillain of pure megalomaniac evil.
* Music/{{Metallica}}:
** "Trapped Under Ice" is about [[HumanPopsicle someone who's frozen alive]] yet still conscious.
--->I don't know how to live through this hell\\
Woken up, I'm still locked in this shell\\
Frozen soul, frozen down to the core\\
Break the ice, I can't take anymore\\
Freezing, can't move at all\\
Screaming, can't hear my call\\
I am dying to live\\
Cry out--I'm trapped under ice
** "One", inspired by ''Literature/JohnnyGotHisGun'', focuses on a soldier who has his eyes, ears, mouth, arms, and legs destroyed (by a UsefulNotes/WW1 German artillery shell in ''Johnny'' and a Vietnamese landmine in "One"), but is still conscious. Though he eventually manages to communicate with the doctors and military men keeping him alive, they refuse to disconnect his life support, and he presumably must exist in that condition (unable to communicate with anyone, see or hear anything, go anywhere, etc.) for the rest of his natural life. Now there's an unsettling thought. The song itself tells the story rather well, especially with these lines:
---> Darkness imprisoning me\\
All that I see, absolute horror\\
I cannot live, I cannot die\\
Trapped in myself, body my holding cell\\
Landmine has taken my sight\\
Taken my speech, taken my hearing\\
Taken my arms, taken my legs\\
Taken my soul, left me with life in Hell!
* The song "Iron Man" by Music/BlackSabbath is about a man from a post-apocalyptic world where everything was devastated by a man made of metal. He travels back in time to warn the people of the past, but something goes wrong during the time travel process and "he was turned to steel." He is aware of his surroundings, but unable to move or speak, and he is completely ignored by everyone who sees him. He is driven insane and when he finally regains mobility, he [[StableTimeLoop goes on a rampage and devastates everything.]]
* Music/IronSavior's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77NyBO4yQWc&feature=related "Watcher in the Sky"]] is from the point of view of the living brain of Iron Savior as the spaceship travels endlessly, out of his control and increasingly unresponsive.
* Pompeii by Bastiel, imagines a hypothetical conversation between two roman citizens who were essentially fossilized by the volcano, waiting for centuries as statues. Obviously they are unable to move, unable to see, unable to speak, only able to think.
--> "Manty days fell away with nothing to show...In your pose as the dust settles around us...How am I ever gonna be an optimist about this?"
* Music/{{Queensryche}}'s "Screaming In Digital" perfectly inverts the Trope Namer, taking the POV of a sentient AI which, though granted consciousness by its domineering maker ('father'), is callously denied the option to exercise free will or communicate with anyone else.
* The video to Music/{{Radiohead}}'s "There There" has Thom Yorke turned into a tree. A tree with his screaming face still visible.
* "Brain Dead" by Music/JudasPriest is about a man suffering from locked-in syndrome who desperately wants to die.
* "Bird Song" by Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine.
* "Blow Up the Outside World" by Music/{{Soundgarden}}. The speaker is essentially singing about how much his life sucks, yet no matter how hard he tries, he either cannot bring himself to suicide, or simply fails at it again and again.
* The second-to-last verse of Music/{{Current 93}}'s epic ''I Have A Special Plan For This World'':
-->''There are some who have no voices \\
Or none that will ever speak \\
Because of the things they know about this world \\
And the things they feel about this world \\
Because the thoughts that fill a brain \\
That is a damaged brain \\
Because the pain that fills a body \\
That is a damaged body \\
Exists in other worlds \\
Countless other worlds \\
Each of which stands alone in an infinite empty blackness \\
For which no words are being conceived \\
And where no voices are able to speak \\
When a brain is filled only with damaged thoughts \\
When a damaged body is filled only with pain \\
And stands alone in a world surrounded by infinite empty blackness \\
And exists in a world for which there is no special plan.''
* The whole decay process in the song "The Hearse Song".
* "Moonshadow" by Music/CatStevens can be seen as someone trying to make the best of this.
* "The Song That Never Ends" is an example of this once the FridgeHorror sets in. [[TemptingFate Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was]]. And [[AndIMustScream they'll continue singing it forever]] just because this is the song that never ends. Yes it goes on and on my friends. Some people started singing it...
* The song "Alien Breed", from DeathMetal band Internal Bleeding, has this line:
--> I am unable to speak\\
I am unable to scream\\
I watch in horror\\
As the experiment goes on before me
* Music/{{Mothy}}'s [[Music/EvilliousChronicles Re_Birthday]] is the theme song of this trope. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zpl1uMEWM_g Just listen to it!]]. [[spoiler: For any not wanting to click the link, basically he's trapped in darkness where he can't hear or see anything and based on manual information it is most possibly the womb of a small doll.]]
* The song "Hamburger Lady" by English band Throbbing Gristle to some extent. The song is based on a short writing by Dr. Al Ackerman who seconds as a [[{{Body Horror}} from past medical experiences]] author. The story is focused on a woman burnt severely from the waist up, cutting off all senses and leaving her in a continuous state of agony.
* In the {{Music/Rush|Band}} song "Hemispheres", an emissary to the gods Apollo and Dionysus pilots a spaceship into the black hole of Cygnus X-1, so as to pass through the Astral Door:
-->I have memory and awareness, but I have no shape or form.\\
As a disembodied spirit, I am dead, and yet unborn.\\
I have passed into Olympus, as was told in tales of old,\\
To the city of immortals, marble white and purest gold.\\
\\
I see the gods in battle rage on high:\\
Thunderbolts across the sky!\\
I cannot move, I cannot hide.\\
I feel a silent scream begin inside.
* "Nightingale" by Music/TheReignOfKindo is about a man left paralyzed and unable to speak after a car accident. To make things worse for him, his girlfriend left him for another man after the fact.
-->"I was driving fast, with roses on my seat\\
And headed home, I was late, with dinner getting cold\\
When I was struck in the side of the car,\\
And then I saw your face, I couldn't move, I couldn't say a word to you\\
\\
And everything in my world was yours,\\
When I held you tenderly\\
Oh now, my world is caving in, cause you're sleeping next to him,\\
[[FateWorseThanDeath If I could die, you bet your life I would..."]]
* Music/TheMechanisms
** "Lost In The Cosmos" tells the story of Drumbot Brian, or at least the part he remembers- the part where he dies, wherein he is strapped to a rocket and shot into space, until [[spoiler: Dr Carmilla finds him and rebuilds every part of his body but his still-beating heart.]]
---> ''Sinews fixed forever more\\
All alone and a-lowly\\
His bones encased in a screaming form\\
Lost in the cosmos lonely\\
At last his heart, its beating slowed\\
All alone and a-lowly\\
But it did not cease, his tale was not o'er\\
Lost in the cosmos lonely''
** "Sleeping Beauty", from the RockOpera ''Once Upon a Time in Space'' contains this, in the lines from [[PoweredByAForsakenChild Briar Rose's]] perspective:
---> ''Wires through my veins and my tendons, \\
Keeping safe my hateful old lord\\
Protecting his infernal defence grid, \\
Unwillingly my lifeblood is poured\\
I once heard them say a kiss could wake me up\\
But I hope my prince will bring a sword''
** The fate of all who die in the City from the RockOpera ''Ulysses Dies at Dawn'' is to have their brains entered into the Acheron, a vast neural network where their barely there consciousnesses are forced into a semi-living purgatory, unable to voice their pain.
---> ''At this point, some words of explanation are needed. Understand, a whole planet covered with steel and wire needs a lot of computing power to run. And there's no processor more powerful or abundant than the brain. So you have the Acheron, a vast network of dead minds, however badly damaged, plugged in and kicked back into a half-conscious hell to run the City. All ruled over by a mad bastard by the name of Hades. ''
** Freya's fate in "Ragnarok II: The Calling", from the RockOpera ''The Bifrost Incident''. [[spoiler:The influences of the [[EldritchAbomination Old Ones]] fuse her to the [[CoolTrain Ratatosk Express]] to watch the rest of the carnage.]]
--->''The silver and the platinum of etchings on the wall\\
Reach to her, her melting skin their cold embrace appalls\\
As she fuses to the core of this abomination train\\
Forever watching, but robbed of any way to voice her pain''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mythology & Religion]]
* Myth/ClassicalMythology:
** Prometheus's punishment from Zeus for stealing fire and giving it to humanity is to be chained to a rock and have his ever-regrowing liver serve as a buffet for an eagle for eternity. However, he still exults in being able to resist telling Zeus the secret of his eventual overthrowal, a fate that Zeus has been anxious to evade ever since the start of his reign. Unlike other examples of this trope in Greek mythology, Heracles eventually frees him.
** Atlas is condemned to bear the heavens (''not'' the world) on his shoulders for eternity. He was later [[TakenForGranite turned to stone]] by Athena or Perseus, using Medusa's head, which in some versions is treated as a MercyKill as he could no longer stand the weight.
** Most of the Greek Titans are bound in Tartarus. As are the giants.
** Typhon is forever trapped under Mount Etna after Zeus threw the mountain on top of him, with his immortal rage causing the mountain to shake and spew fire and smoke.
** Tantalus committed one of the most monstrous acts in Greek mythology by killing his son, cooking him, and serving the resulting dish to the gods, [[EveryoneHasStandards who were so horrified and disgusted]] that they condemned him to an eternity of thirst and starvation. Tantalus was trapped in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree, however, whenever he bent down to drink, the water level went down, and whenever he reached up for a fruit, the branches would move out of his reach. From this fate comes the word "tantalize".
** Sisyphus had attempted to cheat death, so the gods made his punishment reflect the futility of trying to break the system: he is trapped until he can push a boulder up a slope... but every time he reaches the top, the boulder rolls back down.
** The forty-nine Danaïdes murdered their husbands. In Tartarus, their punishment is to carry water from one place to the next. The jugs they have to carry it in are full of leaks that by the time they reached their destination, they would be empty so they would have to go back over and over and ''over and over'' again. (Their sister who fell in love with her husband had a kinder fate.)
** Tithonus is granted immortality, but not eternal youth. As a result, his body withers and his mind decays; he remains, for all time, forgotten in some hidden room, babbling endlessly. (In another story, he eventually turns into a cricket.)
** When the gods want to swear the most solemn of oaths, they swear on the River Styx in the Underworld. Some authors simply have the oath unbreakable, but others say it can be broken. The consequences are harsh indeed: for a year the oathbreaker lies unable to eat, drink, move, ''or breathe'' (and Greek gods cannot die). The next nine years, in which they merely cannot associate with other deities at all, looks mild in comparison.
* Myth/NorseMythology:
** Loki, the TricksterGod, was punished by being chained to a rock with a serpent eternally dripping caustic venom in his face. His wife, Sigyn, stands over him catching the venom in a bowl, occasionally has to turn aside to empty the bowl before it overflows. When she turns aside to do so, or if she allows it to become overfull and spill, his spasms of pain cause earthquakes. Some versions of the binding of Loki state that Loki wasn't just bound to a rock with poison dripping onto him, he was bound with his ''own son's intestines''.
** The fate of Loki's monster offspring, the wolf Fenrir. It is bound by unbreakable fetters and gagged by ''a sword stuck in the roof of its mouth.'' A river of blood and saliva flows continuously from its jaws. It will remain bound like this until Ragnarok.
* ''Literature/TheBible'':
** Lot's wife was turned into a pillar of salt for taking a last look at the home she lived in for so many years. Whether she was conscious after the transformation is to be debated, but if she was she couldn't move or speak while her salt body was slowly eroded by rainfall and winds (and maybe some local deer).
** Gehenna (AKA Valley of Hinnom), a valley near Jerusalem's Old City, has been used in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as an analogous or symbolic reference for Hell itself. In Judaism, this place is sometimes used to refer to She'ol, where wicked souls are sent for punishment and/or purification for roughly a year's time before being sent to the afterlife. The ''really'' wicked souls [[CessationOfExistence are destroyed instead]].
** ''Literature/TheFourGospels'':
*** In Mark's gospel, Jesus refers to the ''Literature/BookOfIsaiah'''s description of Hell in one of his sermons, specifically that those in Hell suffer everlasting fire, and that "their worm does not die" (they would be conscious of their perpetually rotting state). This is also where symbolic references to Gehenna are made.
*** Matthew's gospel recounts that Jesus spoke of Hell as "darkness" and "weeping and gnashing of teeth" (sorrow and regret). Later theologians, such as Creator/CSLewis, speculate based on Jesus' statements in Matthew's gospel that the main punishment of Hell is mostly (or exclusively) from the [[GoMadFromTheIsolation isolation from God]].
* ''Literature/TheQuran'': Verse 87:13 describes the torment of the damned in the "greatest fire" (Hell): "He does not die in there, nor does he live."
* Myth/NativeAmericanMythology:
** Lakota mythology features one story dealing with the origin of the sweat: A boy whose uncles were all captured by a witch and dehydrated. As the vapors entered their bodies, they were restored.
** In Chumash folklore (Native American tribe from Southern California), souls of murderers and other evil people are turned to stone from the neck down and are forced to watch other souls travel to the afterlife.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Podcasts]]
* In one of the Towers of Sorcery in ''Podcast/TheFallenGods'', [[spoiler: the enslaved merfolk. They can only say "How may I serve you today?" in a sing-song voice, unless given a command that requires them to say something not related to their status as slaves. If one does allude to this they begin to freak out and become anxious, but literally cannot change their tune.]]
* In ''Podcast/TheBrightSessions'', Mark, an UnwittingTestSubject who could [[PowerCopying copy the powers]] of other atypicals he was physically near, was forced to mentally travel back to the 1800s with time traveler Camille. Unfortunately she died, and his mind was left stranded, unable to interact with anything or anyone, whilst his body was stuck in a coma in a BlackSite in the present. [[spoiler: Fortunately his sister found another time traveler and figured a way to rescue him after two years.]]
* ''Podcast/TheMagnusArchives'':
** Minor character [[AssholeVictim Eugene Vanderstock]] ends up immobilized but alive after [[PragmaticHero Gertrude]] fills his [[ElementalShapeshifter wax body]] with sawdust and decapitates him. [[PsychicPowers Jon]] doesn't know where Eugene's head is, but he knows he's desperate to scream.
** Minor character Sergey Ushanka, in a desperate attempt to keep his mind intact after his degenerative brain disease killed him, somehow uploaded his consciousness into a computer. However, a computer is binary, full of 1s and 0s, while the human mind is more grey, so this resulted in Ushanka being stuck in a hell of his own making where it hurts to think or even exist and "the angles cut me when I try to think".
** Victims of the ''Catalogue of the Trapped Dead'' become stuck in a sort of limbo between life and death, and those bound to it have dulled emotions and feel pain just existing.
* In ''Podcast/TrialsAndTrebuchets'', [[spoiler:the victims of the pebble demon have their souls trapped in pebbles, where they can still see and hear everything around them but are incapable of communicating or interacting with the world in any way.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theatre]]
* Downplayed and even made [[PlayedForLaughs slightly humorous]] in Stephen Sondheim's ''Theatre/SundayInTheParkWithGeorge.'' At the end of Act One, all of the characters we've seen throughout the first act form a living {{tableau}} of ''Art/ASundayAfternoonOnTheIslandOfLaGrandeJatte'', Georges Seurat's masterpiece. It's a beautiful, powerful image...until Act Two begins. It's been one hundred years, and the people in that idyllic park scene have been trapped there all of that time. While they're able to stretch slightly, they can only do so for a few seconds before they have to return to their positions. Time has stopped for them, and while they can't age, they're also wearing many thick layers of clothing on a blisteringly hot summer day, surrounded by people they've come to despise in the past century, and frozen exactly as they were the moment the painting was finished (a little girl with bad vision isn't wearing her glasses, so her vision will always be hopelessly blurred, ''and'' her hands are sticky; a boatman with bad hygiene has his odor lingering around him--and those sitting near him--and so on). And so long as art historians keep restoring ''La Grande Jatte,'' they're going to be stuck like that ''forever.''
* In the musical adaptation of ''Theatre/BeautyAndTheBeast'', the Enchantress's curse becomes one of these. Rather than automatically changing the Prince and his servants into a hideous beast and random household objects (presumably because there was no way to costume that convincingly), the spell instead works extremely slowly; the humans retain their normal sizes and shapes, but as time passes, they become more thing-like as their human features and appendages are gradually replaced with inanimate parts. It's never made clear whether or not completely transforming into an object (a fate that's befallen some of the servants already) kills you or traps your still-conscious mind in a piece of bric-a-brac without any sensory organs, but still very much alive.
* Poor Lavinia, in [[Creator/WilliamShakespeare William Shakespeare's]] ''Theatre/TitusAndronicus'', undergoes this fate. After being [[RapeAsDrama raped by two of Tamora's sons]], they cut her tongue from her mouth and chop off her hands so she can't communicate what's happened to her. Though she eventually devises a way to tell her father who committed the crime, she's still a virtually helpless, badly traumatized girl who can never speak again.
* ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' has a particularly ambiguous and downright disturbing example. It's said throughout the play that animals are losing their power of speech, and if applicable, their ability to walk on two legs. But we're never told whether or not they actually remember when they could walk and talk, leaving one of two possibilities...either they have forgotten their own sentience, or they are psychologically tortured to the point of not speaking out for fear something will happen. Something Bad indeed.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theme Parks]]
* A subtle example in the queue for ''Ride/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyMissionBreakout''. One of the artifact cases contains [[Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron a damaged Ultron drone]] that makes vague threats of destroying humanity. Assuming that every other Ultron drone was destroyed (as is the case at the end of ''Age of Ultron''), then that drone contains all of Ultron's massive code and consciousness, but is barely able to talk, let alone function.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Toys]]
* ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'':
** The EldritchAbomination Tren Krom, who had his body sealed to an island and was rendered completely immobile. Furthermore, he was so hideous that anyone who looked at him ran the risk of going insane. Then, he went and tricked [[TheChewToy Lewa]] into switching bodies with him, leaving poor Lewa stranded on an isolated island in a monstrous, tentacled body, unable to move around, not being able to speak except via telepathy, and with no hope of rescue since his friends think he's still with them, if acting a bit strangely. It got reversed in the end, and after a while, Tren Krom was finally granted his freedom. And then murdered off screen instantly.
** The [[MurderousMask Mask of Life]], with the exception of [[TheChosenOne those chosen to bear it]], curses every living being that comes into contact with it by subjecting them to one of these fates, with even its own creators not exempt from being cursed. What's worse: killing every living thing you touch, being attached to a giant spider, or causing inanimate objects to become sentient and scream at you?
* According to Sine's backstory in ''Toys/LittleAppleDolls'' she was transported to a purgatory full of people stuck in this fate after she died. It's referred to as "the in between" between life and death.
-->The Little Girl saw many like her. They were pale and hollow eyed. Lost and lonely. Some, their eyes sealed shut and their mouths wiped away. They could not speak. They could not see. Their time before, was cut short by being real sick and having their lives taken by force. A little boy ran up towards her and shook her; he was speaking but she could not understand. He spoke in rustling leaves and sirens.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Animation]]
* The second episode of ''WebAnimation/BattleForBFDI'' has Taco being trapped in a giant jawbreaker. Sure, it's PlayedForLaughs, but imagine being cramped up in a small cage with no light, contact with anyone or any chance of escape. She even [[AutoCannibalism eats part of herself to survive]].
[[/folder]]
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[[folder: Web Animation]]
* The second episode of ''WebAnimation/BattleForBFDI'' has Taco being trapped in a giant jawbreaker. Sure, it’s PlayedForLaughs, but imagine being cramped up in a small cage with no light, contact with anyone or any chance of escape. She even [[AutoCannibalism eats part of herself to survive]].
[[/folder]]
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** AndIMustScream/{{Gamebooks}}
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** AndIMustScream/TheDCU
** AndIMustScream/MarvelUniverse
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Horrifically, this trope is a common symptom of several diseases in RealLife. Locked In Syndrome for example is a condition where someone lays in something similar to a coma, unable to utilize their limbs or speak, but they are fully conscious. Stephen Hawking would have suffered an AndIMustScream fate from his Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, if it weren't for the computer that allowed him to speak.

Sometimes appears as a {{Backstory}}, if a [[SealedIndexInACan Sealed Person In A Can]] was aware while sealed away. Can overlap with GoMadFromTheIsolation if the character's separated from other people rather than among them but unable to interact. Also a handy way to punish the villain with a horrible fate, while still leaving a door open for them to return someday.

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Horrifically, this trope is a common symptom of several diseases in RealLife. Locked In Syndrome for example is a condition where someone lays in something similar to a coma, unable to utilize their limbs or speak, but they are fully conscious. Stephen Hawking would have suffered an AndIMustScream And I Must Scream fate from his Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, if it weren't for the computer that allowed him to speak.

Sometimes appears as a {{Backstory}}, if a [[SealedIndexInACan Sealed Person In A in a Can]] was aware while sealed away. Can overlap with GoMadFromTheIsolation if the character's separated from other people rather than among them but unable to interact. Also a handy way to punish the villain with a horrible fate, while still leaving a door open for them to return someday.
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Horrifically, this trope is a common symptom of several diseases in RealLife. Locked In Syndrome for example is a condition where someone lays in something similar to a coma, unable to utilize their limbs or speak, but they are fully conscious. Stephen Hawking would have suffered an AndIMustScream fate from his Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, if it weren't for the computer that allowed him to speak.
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A character suffers from an extremely horrifying FateWorseThanDeath. [[DrivenToSuicide Suicide]] [[ICannotSelfTerminate is not an option]]; even death never comes to free them from it. They are immobilized or otherwise contained, unable to communicate with anyone, and unlikely to be removed from this situation -- not even by death -- anytime in the foreseeable future.

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A character suffers from an extremely horrifying FateWorseThanDeath. [[DrivenToSuicide Suicide]] is [[ICannotSelfTerminate is not an option]]; even death never comes to free them from it. They are immobilized or otherwise contained, unable to communicate with anyone, and unlikely to be removed from this situation -- not even by death -- anytime in the foreseeable future.
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Usually, when this arises, it is eternal unless he's freed by outside forces, but a "mere" years-long or centuries-long fate is possible. For instance, a robot with a 100-year battery life getting buried underground. In fact, this is a very common sci-fi trope involving artificial intelligences who are potentially immortal due to being made of software. Unfortunately, if a victim ''is'' rescued, they may well [[GoMadFromTheIsolation have been driven insane from the experience]]. (Some of the listed examples show exactly that.)

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Usually, when this arises, it is eternal unless he's they're freed by outside forces, but a "mere" years-long or centuries-long fate is possible. For instance, a robot with a 100-year battery life getting buried underground. In fact, this is a very common sci-fi trope involving artificial intelligences who are potentially immortal due to being made of software. Unfortunately, if a victim ''is'' rescued, they may well [[GoMadFromTheIsolation have been driven insane from the experience]]. (Some of the listed examples show exactly that.)
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Usually, when this arises, it is eternal unless he's freed by outside forces, but a "mere" years-long or centuries-long fate is possible. For instance, a robot with a 100-year battery life getting buried underground. In fact, this is a very common sci-fi trope involving artificial intelligences who are potentially immortal due to being made of software. Unfortunately, if a victim ''is'' rescued, he may well [[GoMadFromTheIsolation have been driven insane from the experience]]. (Some of the listed examples show exactly that.)

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Usually, when this arises, it is eternal unless he's freed by outside forces, but a "mere" years-long or centuries-long fate is possible. For instance, a robot with a 100-year battery life getting buried underground. In fact, this is a very common sci-fi trope involving artificial intelligences who are potentially immortal due to being made of software. Unfortunately, if a victim ''is'' rescued, he they may well [[GoMadFromTheIsolation have been driven insane from the experience]]. (Some of the listed examples show exactly that.)
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This is often a variation of TakenForGranite in which the victim remains conscious, and the worst-case scenario for tropes such as SealedRoomInTheMiddleOfNowhere, BalefulPolymorph, PhantomZonePicture, and WhoWantsToLiveForever.

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This is often a variation of TakenForGranite in which the victim remains conscious, and the worst-case scenario for tropes such as SealedRoomInTheMiddleOfNowhere, BalefulPolymorph, ForcedTransformation, PhantomZonePicture, and WhoWantsToLiveForever.
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It's also very common for the afterlife to involve this trope. {{Hell}} is often represented as a place where those who were evil in life, or who followed the wrong religion, suffer for eternity with no hope of ever getting out. In other cases, often involving TheNothingAfterDeath, ''[[OnlyOneAfterlife everyone]]'' is doomed to this fate when they die.
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** AndIMustScream/SCPFoundation
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* AndIMustScream/{{Gamebooks}}

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* AndIMustScream/TabletopGames



** AndIMustScream/SCPFoundation




!!Other examples:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Audio Plays]]
* In ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'', the final regeneration of [[spoiler: The Eleven]] is treated this way. As they lay writhing in pain with Artron energy, scrambling to find the MacGuffin of the story which would preserve them as they are, they end up regenerating regardless [[spoiler: forcing the Eleven to be a voice in the head of the next regeneration the Twelve, doomed to be stuck with the voices he's been stuck with their entire lives]]. They break down upon realising this.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Card Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'':
** Ravi, a planeswalker in the world of Ulgrotha, was desperate to end a huge war. She did so by ringing the Apocalypse Chime, which wiped out the whole battlefield of its warring parties, and put herself in a magic coffin designed by her mentor to avoid the destruction. Unfortunately, she didn't have a way to get ''out''. [[spoiler:She was eventually found by Baron Sengir, becoming the "delightfully" mad Grandmother Sengir.]]
** The Exile mechanic tends to use either this trope (or otherwise a FateWorseThanDeath) or CessationOfExistence to remove a creature from the game, such as the case with [[https://scryfall.com/card/ddk/27/unmake Unmake]], where a creature finds themselves permanently trapped inside a mirror.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* "Hyperspace Cryogenic Insomnia Blues" by Music/TomSmith, in which the singer is awake during his cryogenic sleep.
-->We're two weeks out of Terran orbit\\
Ten years left to go...
* Music/{{Metallica}}:
** "Trapped Under Ice" is sung from the perspective of [[HumanPopsicle a person stuck in cryonic stasis]], who somehow becomes conscious again yet is unable to move.
---> ''Freezing, can't move at all\\
Screaming, can't hear my call\\
I am dying to live\\
Cry out, I'm trapped under ice!''
** "One" , inspired by ''Literature/JohnnyGotHisGun'', focuses on a soldier who has his eyes, ears, mouth, arms, and legs destroyed (by a WWI German artillery shell in ''Johnny'' and a Vietnamese landmine in "One"), but is still conscious. Though he eventually manages to communicate with the doctors and military men keeping him alive, they refuse to disconnect his life support, and he presumably must exist in that condition (unable to communicate with anyone, see or hear anything, go anywhere, etc.) for the rest of his natural life. Now there's an unsettling thought. The song itself tells the story rather well, especially with these lines:
--->''Darkness imprisoning me\\
All that I see, absolute horror\\
I cannot live, I cannot die\\
Trapped in myself, body my holding cell\\
Landmine has taken my sight\\
Taken my speech, taken my hearing\\
Taken my arms, taken my legs\\
Taken my soul, left me with life in Hell!''
* The song "Iron Man" by Music/BlackSabbath is about a man from a post-apocalyptic world where everything was devastated by a man made of metal. He travels back in time to warn the people of the past, but something goes wrong during the time travel process and "he was turned to steel." He is aware of his surroundings, but unable to move or speak, and he is completely ignored by everyone who sees him. He is driven insane and when he finally regains mobility, he [[StableTimeLoop goes on a rampage and devastates everything]].
* "The Ballad of Barry Allen" by Music/JimsBigEgo is an AlternativeCharacterInterpretation of Franchise/TheFlash which tries to apply FridgeLogic to his SuperSpeed, imagining him trapped in a world where TimeStandsStill.
--->''I wish I'd never gone into my lab\\
To experiment that night\\
Before lightning flashed around me\\
And time changed speed\\
Now I gotta try to be so patient until calamity will strike\\
Because when things change in an instant\\
It's almost fast enough for me''
* Music/TheMechanisms
** "Lost In The Cosmos" tells the story of Drumbot Brian, or at least the part he remembers- the part where he dies, wherein he is strapped to a rocket and shot into space, until [[spoiler: Dr Carmilla finds him and rebuilds every part of his body but his still-beating heart.]]
---> ''Sinews fixed forever more\\
All alone and a-lowly\\
His bones encased in a screaming form\\
Lost in the cosmos lonely\\
At last his heart, its beating slowed\\
All alone and a-lowly\\
But it did not cease, his tale was not o’er\\
Lost in the cosmos lonely''
** "Sleeping Beauty" contains this, in the lines from Briar Rose's perspective:
---> ''Wires through my veins and my tendons, \\
Keeping safe my hateful old lord\\
Protecting his infernal defence grid, \\
Unwillingly my lifeblood is poured\\
I once heard them say a kiss could wake me up\\
But I hope my prince will bring a sword''
** Freya's fate in "Ragnarok II: The Calling". [[spoiler:The influences of the [[EldritchAbomination Old Ones]] fuse her to the [[CoolTrain Ratatosk Express]] to watch the rest of the carnage.]]
--->''The silver and the platinum of etchings on the wall\\
Reach to her, her melting skin their cold embrace appalls\\
As she fuses to the core of this abomination train\\
Forever watching, but robbed of any way to voice her pain''
* Music/IronSavior's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77NyBO4yQWc&feature=related "Watcher in the Sky"]] is from the point of view of the living brain of Iron Savior as the spaceship travels endlessly, out of his control and increasingly unresponsive.
* Music/{{Queensryche}}'s "Screaming In Digital" perfectly inverts the Trope Namer, taking the POV of a sentient AI which, though granted consciousness by its domineering maker ('father'), is callously denied the option to exercise free will or communicate with anyone else.
* The video to Music/{{Radiohead}}'s "There There" has Thom Yorke turned into a tree. A tree with his screaming face still visible.
* "Brain Dead" by Music/JudasPriest is about a man suffering from locked-in syndrome who desperately wants to die.
%%* "Bird Song" by Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine.
* The second-to-last verse of Music/{{Current 93}}'s epic ''I Have A Special Plan For This World'':
-->''There are some who have no voices \\
Or none that will ever speak \\
Because of the things they know about this world \\
And the things they feel about this world \\
Because the thoughts that fill a brain \\
That is a damaged brain \\
Because the pain that fills a body \\
That is a damaged body \\
Exists in other worlds \\
Countless other worlds \\
Each of which stands alone in an infinite empty blackness \\
For which no words are being conceived \\
And where no voices are able to speak \\
When a brain is filled only with damaged thoughts \\
When a damaged body is filled only with pain \\
And stands alone in a world surrounded by infinite empty blackness \\
And exists in a world for which there is no special plan.''
%%* The whole decay process in the song "The Hearse Song".
* "Moonshadow" by Music/CatStevens can be seen as someone trying to make the best of this.
* "The Song That Never Ends" is an example of this once the FridgeHorror sets in. [[TemptingFate Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was]]. And they'll continue singing it forever just because this is the song that never ends. Yes it goes on and on my friends. Some people started singing it...
* The song "Alien Breed", from DeathMetal band Internal Bleeding, has this line:
--> I am unable to speak\\
I am unable to scream\\
I watch in horror\\
As the experiment goes on before me
* ''Music/EvilliousChronicles'': "Re_Birthday" is the theme song of this trope. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zpl1uMEWM_g Just listen to it!]] [[spoiler:For any not wanting to click the link, basically he's trapped in darkness where he can't hear or see anything and based on manual information it is most possibly the womb of a small doll.]]
* The song Hamburger Lady by English band Music/ThrobbingGristle to some extent. The song is based on a short writing by Dr. Al Ackerman who seconds as a [[{{Body Horror}} from past medical experiences]] author. The story is focused on a woman burnt severely from the waist up, cutting off all senses and leaving her in a continuous state of agony.
* In the Music/{{Rush}} song "Hemispheres", an emissary to the gods Apollo and Dionysus pilots a spaceship into the black hole of Cygnus X-1, so as to pass through the Astral Door:
-->I have memory and awareness, but I have no shape or form.\\
As a disembodied spirit, I am dead, and yet unborn.\\
I have passed into Olympus, as was told in tales of old,\\
To the city of immortals, marble white and purest gold.\\
\\
I see the gods in battle rage on high:\\
Thunderbolts across the sky!\\
I cannot move, I cannot hide.\\
I feel a silent scream begin inside.
* "Nightingale" by Music/TheReignOfKindo is about a man left paralyzed and unable to speak after a car accident. To make things worse for him, his girlfriend left him for another man after the fact.
-->"I was driving fast, with roses on my seat\\
And headed home, I was late, with dinner getting cold\\
When I was struck in the side of the car,\\
And then I saw your face, I couldn't move, I couldn't say a word to you\\
\\
And everything in my world was yours,\\
When I held you tenderly\\
Oh now, my world is caving in, cause you're sleeping next to him,\\
[[FateWorseThanDeath If I could die, you bet your life I would..."]]
* Music/{{Gloryhammer}}'s first album, ''Tales from the Kingdom of Fife'', ends with EvilSorcerer Zargothrax being imprisoned in magical ice on Triton. On their second album, ''Space 1992: Rise Of The Chaos Wizards'', he is released from his prison 1000 years later.
* Very much so throughout the song "A Grave Within a Grave" by {{Lil Ugly Mane}}. A dismal, pessimistic telling of a first-person account of the events the narrator endures after death:
-->From the inside of my corpse, 30 seconds is like a century\\
Imprisoned in necrotic flesh\\
Cognizant beyond my death\\
Paralyzed and frozen in this carnal penitentiary\\
Lucidly projecting hellish spectres\\
Ghoulish architecture, enveloped\\
In a darkness far beyond my mind can measure\\
Suffocating violent pressure\\
It just goes on forever, are these electro-\\
Magnetic hallucinations?\\
Is this everybody's afterlife or something I've created?\\
Abandoned and dismissed in a flaccid\\
Impotence with the cold illumination that I no longer exist\\
In a grave within a grave\\
It was the first time I prayed, no one\\
There to tell me that I shouldn't be afraid\\
Falling endlessly deeper, yet immobile and still\\
In this infinite aethyr washing over\\
My filth, neither angels or reapers or ghosts were fulfilled\\
Just a cavity to soak up my guilt\\
In my depravity, the flowers\\
Up above me wilting down so they can laugh at me\\
To think we spend our lives\\
Convinced we understand agony, a familiar\\
Voice: "He's finally at peace"\\
Shrieking through the silence to remind me I'm deceased\\
I tried to answer but the dead can't\\
Speak, the biggest prison in the world's underground six feet.
* The song, "Too Much to Lose" by The Pineapple Thief contains a spoken word passage that seems to describe someone being eternally trapped in a room that they can neither stand nor sit in:
-->Ok, so I'm trapped in a room, too short to stand, too narrow to sit\\
So what you think about that?\\
Ah someone scratches the walls, but it doesn't seem to make any difference\\
But then that doesn't matter\\
Because what you've made for me, these walls go on for infinity, you know?\\
So I'm trapped in here for eternity\\
So what you think about that?
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mythology and Religion]]
* An example from Norse mythology: the fate of Loki's monster offspring, the wolf Fenrir. It is bound by unbreakable fetters and gagged by ''a sword stuck in the roof of its mouth.'' A river of blood and saliva flows continuously from its jaws. It remains bound and gagged like this until the end of time.
* Lot's wife was turned into a pillar of salt for taking a last look at the home she lived in for so many years. Whether she was conscious after the transformation is to be debated, but if she was she couldn't move or speak while her salt body was slowly eroded by rainfall and winds (and maybe some local deer).
* In Chumash folklore (Native American tribe from Southern California), souls of murderers and other evil people are turned to stone from the neck down and are forced to watch other souls travel to the afterlife.
* In Myth/ClassicalMythology, Tithonus is granted immortality, but not eternal youth. As a result, his body withers and his mind decays; he remains, for all time, forgotten in some hidden room, babbling endlessly. (In another variation of the story, he eventually turns into a cricket.)
* [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek mythology]] is full of these since many things were immortal.
** Atlas being [[TakenForGranite turned to stone]] by Athena, using Medusa's head, after he's condemned to bear the heavens (''[[SadlyMythtaken not]]'' the world) on his shoulders for eternity. Although in some versions of the tale he ''asked'' to be turned to stone, as carrying the heavens had become too much for him to bear.
** Another Titan named Prometheus, who stole fire from Olympus and gave it to humanity, was punished by being bound to a rock while an eagle pecked out his eternally-regenerating liver every day. Hercules eventually set him free, though.
** When the gods want to swear the most solemn of oaths, they swear on the River Styx in the Underworld. Some authors simply have the oath unbreakable, but others say it can be broken. The consequences are harsh indeed: for a year the oathbreaker lies unable to eat, drink, move, ''or breathe'' (and Greek gods cannot die). The next nine years, in which they merely cannot associate with other deities at all, looks mild in comparison.
** Typhon was trapped forever under Mount Aetna.
* Many religions have this in the form of Hell, a place of fire (usually, otherwise just isolation) in the afterlife. The Christian example in particular has a variant called the lake of fire, which is practically separation from the Almighty, which means that no good or godly thing exists and one is stuck in there for eternity. It's not stated if one can move around or not in hell, but for the unholy trinity it seems that is not the case. Mentions of fire and brimstone (old word for sulfur), outer darkness, ''worms'', "corpses" and being unstoppable. It is also likened to being sliced apart by a sword and it being better to take one's eye or hand off and go life crippled than to go to hell. The only "good" thing is that it is not the same for everyone, for instance an honest pagan would have it like ''heaven'' compared to the demonic host.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Podcasts]]
* In one of the Towers of Sorcery in ''Podcast/TheFallenGods'', [[spoiler: the enslaved merfolk. They can only say "How may I serve you today?" in a sing-song voice, unless given a command that requires them to say something not related to their status as slaves. If one does allude to this they begin to freak out and become anxious, but literally cannot change their tune.]]
* In ''Podcast/TheBrightSessions'', Mark, an UnwittingTestSubject who could [[PowerCopying copy the powers]] of other atypicals he was physically near, was forced to mentally travel back to the 1800s with time traveler Camille. Unfortunately she died, and his mind was left stranded, unable to interact with anything or anyone, whilst his body was stuck in a coma in a BlackSite in the present. [[spoiler: Fortunately his sister found another time traveler and figured a way to rescue him after two years.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TableTopGame/WorldOfDarkness''
** ''TableTopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness''
*** In ''TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade'' vampires that are staked or starve for long enough, rather than dying, are sent into torpor, a kind of stasis. This is far from mercy, as vampires in this state experience the world more or less in real-time, but suffer terrifying nightmares. And considering that very few kindred would willingly starve themselves into this kind of state, this probably means that said vampire is trapped somewhere, meaning that this state can go on indefinitely. No wonder a great many ancient vampires (and possibly the antediluvians and Caine in the original series) have been driven utterly insane when revived. One sourcebook mentions that the nightmares tend to involve what put you into torpor in the first place, with Kindred starving to torpor stuck in an eternal loop where they hunt a human and never reach them. Go into torpor through violence, or being staked, and God help you-- because you're going to relive that losing battle until someone finds it in their dead heart to revive you. That is, if they don't decide to chow down on you instead, in which case, you'll simply scream inside your immobile body and watch as your saviour devours everything that made you who you are and all your memories, before you crumble into a pile of ash. And that ''still'' doesn't end your torment, because it is rather heavily implied that you survive within your devourer's body for the rest of eternity.
*** In the sourcebook ''Mexico by Night'' there is a character description of one Jaggedy Andy who, as a mortal, insulted Sasha Vykos, the infamous Sabbat Tzimisce. When Andy spit in its face, Vykos just simply smudged its hand over the mortal's face, crafting bone and flesh over all his facial features. Just as he was about to die, Vykos made one of its thugs Embrace him. Now he wakes up every night without facial features and every night he must open his mouth and eyes with a hammer and chisel, which is a very painful process. To add to the insult, he is as good as grounded to the landfill in which he was left, because even poking his ''face'' outside could start an uproar both among Vampires and Mortals. Another thought to go through before messing with the Tzimisce...
*** Similarly, the Hierarchy in ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'' does this to whoever causes too much trouble. Their ghostly corpus is "soulforged," boiled down and rendered into a permanent shape, be it a sword, a coin, or an ashtray. A similar process exists through the arts of Moliate, where the wraith is effectively lobotomized and turned into something more suitable, be it a barghest for Legionnaire patrols or a high-ranking wraith's chaise lounge. However, official word as of the 2nd edition is that Soulforging destroys the consciousness of the ghost being soulforged... though wraiths don't know that for sure, as there are magical arts that let them extract knowledge from the forged soul. Oh, and the fact that soulsteel occasionally weeps and moans.
*** ''TabletopGame/DemonTheFallen'' defines Hell very succinctly. Imagine you could see every single dimension - all of them. You can see all the colors in the spectrum, every atom in every mote of dust... You are a being of all of reality. Got that? Shut that all off in a fraction of a second. And then keep it off. ''For millennia''. It's just you, the others who were on your side, and the thought that everything you worked for has failed and can never be regained. Yeah, there's a reason the ''Demon'' KarmaMeter is called '''''Torment'''''.
** ''TabletopGame/ChroniclesOfDarkness''
*** ''TabletopGame/VampireTheRequiem'' somehow manages to make torpor worse; when you go into torpor, your memories tend to... [[TheFogOfAges shift]]. It's not uncommon for an ancient vampire to come out of a long torpor wondering what really happened, what was a story he heard second-hand, and what was just idle fantasy. Oh, and it's suggested in some books that vampire souls actually manage to travel to the Underworld when they're in torpor... and there are ''things'' in the Underworld that don't like them.
*** ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost'' does this to all changelings -- your player character is someone who, by whatever scraps of luck, managed to somehow ''escape''. And you have no idea if maybe, just maybe, you were actually ''let go''. You may have been the pot in which a twining, bloodsucking rose was grown, your Keeper gently watering you with arcane acids and admiring the beauty of the flowers growing out from the slits in your lungs. You may have been twisted to have the body of a hound and the mind of a man, then the body of a man and the mind of a hound, over and over and back and forth until you couldn't tell which was which. You may have had to spend a hundred years walking along the razor edges of a network of swords, suspended high above a valley of crackling flames or gnashing rocks. The True Fae have such a wide variety of ways to "play" with humans...
*** In ''TabletopGame/MageTheAwakening'', if an Abyssal entity doesn't simply kill you in horrible fashion or corrupt the next seven generations of your family to its service, it will likely inflict this upon you. Abyssal creatures are less than pleasant.
* This trope nicely sums up the ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' universe. And then there are hundreds of orders of magnitude nadirs that really stand out...
** There's the GodEmperor of Mankind, the MessianicArchetype of the setting. Reduced to a shattered husk, kept on life support for 10,000 years ([[HumanSacrifice powered by the lives of 1,000 psyker every day]]), unable to move or communicate yet [[PoweredByAForsakenChild his living consciousness is used as a psychic navigation system]] [[HyperSpaceIsAScaryPlace for Faster than Light travel through what is basically Hell]], and also while the unified humanity he worked to build falls into a {{dystopia}}n hell around him. It gets more into it when you realise that everything he aspired to accomplish (secular humanism and the destruction of Chaos altogether) is being defiled and torn down by the CorruptChurch. ''In his name''. On top of that, the supposed preachers of his word are also the ones possibly conspiring to keep him in the vegetative state, as they're all paranoid and believe that if he is allowed to die and reincarnate, he'll be gone forever and the Imperium will plunge into darkness forever (Inquisitor Lord Karamazov was famous for executing one of the supposed "reincarnations" of the Emperor, much to the chagrin of his colleagues). A quote about the 40k universe sums it up:
--->"A galaxy where the only person still sane is powerless to do anything but watch the universe die."
*** According to the ''Inquisition War'' trilogy, he actually ''is'' still conscious and aware of his status on life-support, and still somewhat capable of psychic communication to anyone in his closest vicinity and freezing time to that person if he so wishes. It is heavily implied, however, that he cannot focus too much attention to communicating with anyone who he is talking with, or he'd not be able to handle the most vital parts of the Imperium, such as the Astronomican.
** The ''Inquisition War'' trilogy also details the continuation of consciousness whilst suspended in a stasis field, though the consciousness is locked in whatever feeling was being felt at the submersion in the stasis field. Naturally this discovery is then used by the Inquisition to torture individuals for great lengths of time while effectively halting the decay of their bodies.
*** Hey, that means that Roboute Guilliman, Primarch of the Ultramarines is experiencing this. Mortally wounded by a poison blade wielded by his former brother primarch Fulgrim, the Apothecaries bundled him into a stasis field while on the verge of death and set him up as a shrine (something he would likely not appreciate). Ouch.
*** Guilliman would eventually be [[BackFromTheDead awoken]] and restored to his former health and vigor. While he didn't comment on his statis, he was ''livid'' at waking up to [[BadFuture the grim darkness]] that the Imperium had become.
** ''Into the Maelstrom'', the title short story from a collection released decades ago has a SpaceMarine Librarian imprisoned forever in a Dreadnought sarcophagus because he was revealed to have been an infiltrator by the Chaos warband he was tasked with spying on to find where they would attack.
*** Being put into a Dreadnought is an honour for regular Space Marines as they can fight the Emperor's enemies even after death, albeit with slowly degrading mental faculties. Chaos Marines however, being {{Sense Freak}}s taken to the literal utter screaming extreme, consider it to be the worst punishment imaginable, as even while battling they can't feel [[AxCrazy the joy of slaughter]] and while inactive their brethren have to ''chain them to a wall'' to prevent Marine from breaking loose and killing everyone.
*** Later Chaos Dreadnoughts and their Helbrute successors were purposely built with this in mind, their sarcophagi reconfigured to drive the occupants into madness, which the occupants can never get used to either.
*** Any Daemon Weapon or a bound Daemon results in this on an EldritchAbomination. The daemon is so crazy that he will attempt to devour its wielder just so it can get some sort of outside contact, even though such an act would result in the weapon being rendered inert again.
** ''Fulgrim'' has an impressive one of these, [[spoiler:as the primarch Fulgrim is eventually completely possessed by the demon joyriding in him, who keeps him fully aware of its actions in his body, which is mutated by the demon into something more pleasing to it. While his soul was trapped inside a portrait.]]
*** It's later revealed that [[spoiler:Fulgrim had successfully regained control of his body. He trapped the daemon in the portrait that Fulgrim was formerly trapped in, and fully embraced his new form as a Daemon Prince.]]
** Haemonculi do this to their victims, surgically altering their bodies until they are, say, a collection of organs still alive and sentient, or a sack of helpless flesh. The Haemonculi arts, however, are in fact required by the Dark Eldar to survive (pain and the suffering of others apparently grants them immortality so that they in turn do not suffer this trope under [[EldritchAbomination Slaanesh]]). Needless to say, this may very well apply to every single slave of the Dark Eldar.
*** In ''Nightbringer'', the Ultramarines find a victim of a Haemonculus on Pavonis that was entirely dissected and hung piece by piece like a blown-apart cross section of a human being. Then they see that the various pieces and organs of the victim are still connected by veins and nerve strands. THEN they realize the victim is still alive and feeling every agonizing moment, and is trying to rasp "kill me" at the marines. It freaks the fearless Ultramarines out so much they open fire and euthanize everything in the vicinity to splinters. High octane nightmare fuel indeed.
** The Eldar as a whole. Once Eldar die, their souls are still fully conscious in the Warp and then immediately sucked into a hellish disgusting vortex by [[EldritchAbomination Slaanesh]] to eternally torture and rape them in countless different ways day and night forever and ever. Thus it is completely necessary for them to make [[MoralEventHorizon gut-wrenching sacrifices]], including manipulating entire civilizations into destroying each other (and in the case of the Dark Eldar, torturing other species as sacrifice to appease said god of pain), just so that they can save one of their own. All Eldar need to carry with them a [[SoulJar Spirit Stone]] (or Waystone in some versions) that absorb their soul upon death, preventing Slaanesh from getting his hands on them. These same stones can be used to revive them in the form of a Wraithguard or Wraithlord or (in the case of farseers) put into the craftworld to join a crystal wall of seers for all of eternity, sharing their knowledge with their descendants. However, it's known that several craftworlds are desolate and completely devoid of life, as well as Eldar falling on foreign worlds, their stones remain unretrieved for possibly many years, or never. They will be stuck alone, unable to communicate with anyone (it's stated that they only join their ancestors once their spirit stones are attached to the infinity circuit), for all that time. And you know what? This fate is still ''far'' better than the other gruesome alternative.
*** A similar fate happens to Exarchs. These are warriors who are lost upon their path of war and unable to leave it, becoming instructors to others that want to learn the art as well as leaders in war. Each Exarch, upon death, would merge with their suit rather than their Spirit Stone, so that they may once again join the next generation of warriors when their suit is donned again (they merge spirits with whoever wears the suit). Phoenix lords go through the same thing, except that their personality completely dominates the other souls. Much like the Spirit stones, it's implied that many exarch, and some phoenix lords, now lay on some forgotten world, their suit lost forever and unable to communicate with anyone.
*** Funny you should mention the Dark Eldar, they quite literally feed on the suffering of their captives and are skilled enough to keep one alive for months or even ''years'' under torture. Sometimes they'll actually allow a slave to die or [[DrivenToSuicide kill themselves]] only to bring them back alive and feed on their despair when they wake up again from their death on the operating table of a Haemonculi.
** Still nothing compared to the Outsider and possibly some Necrons - they were imprisoned before humans ever arose, on the order of some ''60 million years''. When awake the Necrons fall into this trope, completely subservient automatons trapped within effectively immortal metal shells. Most Necrons are "fortunately" mindless and probably not aware of their situation, but Necron Lords most definitely are.
*** Flayed Ones were awake during their entire entombment. When they resurrected, they had became AxCrazy and wore their enemies' skin on their body. Because of this, [[CursedWithAwesome they are also immune to Morale checks]].
** Almost the entire Thousand Sons Legion suffers from this, as a screwed up spell caused most of them to be reduced to dust with their souls trapped in their armour. They can still move (and fight) but are utterly enslaved to Ahrihman and the other non-dusted leaders.
** One of Slaanesh's circles of temptation is filled with fantastical treasures. Anyone who touches one of the golden statues will be turned into gold himself, while his soul remains fully conscious.
*** Speaking of Slannesh, there's also his champion, Lucius the Eternal. If you kill him and feel the smallest amount of satsifaction for your deed, you will ever so slowly be transformed into Lucius. Eventually nothing will be left of you, except for a new, throbbing face with an eternal scream fixed onto it on Lucius' armor, and in the 10,000 or so years that he has been killing (And been killed) he has dozens, if not hundreds of those faces covering his armor.
** In the new Necron codex, there is mention of a crownworld where an alien prophet's head is kept alive in stasis to predict the future. It's implied to have been stuck there for the past ''60 million years''.
** There is also a daemon that was banished and trapped within its own skull by the Grey Knights, and is kept in that state by the constant chanting of acolytes.
** The Grey Knights' Vault of Labyrinths has several dozen [[SoulJar Soul Jars]] that contain daemons trapped inside them.
** A milder example occurred in the short story "Among Fiends". The Chaos Champion Scaevolla is forced by the gods to choose between hunting down the progeny of his former best friend for all eternity or spawnhood. He isn't pleased.
** Space Wolves member Lukas the Trickster replaced one of his two hearts with a stasis bomb, set to go off when his remaining one stops beating. Whoever's caught with him in the blast will be trapped in an eternal time loop of a few seconds, forced to hear him laugh [[TakingYouWithMe as his very last, and very best prank pays off]], for eternity.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}} Fantasy'' has Count Mordrek the Damned, which under normal circumstances would be a redundant title for any Chaos warrior. This one suffers from constant and horrific mutations, but unlike most that suffer this fate, he remains sealed inside his armor, and his mind has been left intact. It's also mentioned that every time he dies the Chaos gods resurrect him, and this has been going on for so long that no one remembers which god he worshiped, or what he did to offend them.
** Spawndom in either ''Warhammer'' Universe; if a Chaos worshipper does something to seriously offend the gods, or can't handle the amount of mutations they're getting, they'll devolve into a constantly mutating mass of BodyHorror known as a Chaos Spawn. Some sections of the fluff indicate the spawn are perfectly aware of the pain of having multiple limbs, mouths, eyes, horns, ect. burst from their bodies, but can do nothing to stop the changing as they're herded into battle by their former comrades.
* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
** The Imprisonment spell entombs the subject for an indefinite amount of time somewhere "far beneath the surface of the earth". Normally, this spell is not an example as the victim is put in [[HumanPopsicle Suspended Animation]] and won't remember any part of its imprisonment when released. However, in ''VideoGame/BaldursGate'' this is not the case as the player is threatened with this spell (and the emphasis of ''suffering'') by a [[KnightTemplar Harper]], and one can free a number of people from an artifact that imprisons users in the Underdark; all but two (one who'd only been in there for days, and another who was TheUndead and presumably too crazy to be affected) are alive but incurably insane. In 5e, Imprisonment can be cast by Warlocks and Wizards as a 9th level spell. The effect vary, but each one is what-the-fucktopus territory. '''Burial''' is the classic version, '''Chaining''' and '''Slumber''' is ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin, '''Hedge Prison''' throws the target in a PocketDimension of whatever the caster wants, be it a tower, a cage, another confined structure, or, if you're feeling especially sadistic, a labyrinth, and '''Minimus Containment''', which shrinks the target down to 1 inch, and places them in a gemstone for your viewing pleasure. Every version can only be dispelled by the caster, if a condition set by the caster is fulfilled or if someone wastes a 9th level spell slot on Dispel Magic, requiring a level 17 spell caster at least. If you don't have that, and really want your friend back, have fun searching down that ''Wish'' scroll...
** A ''Mirror of Life Trapping'' can be used as a trap, a prison, or both. If a sentient being sees his reflection, he's drawn inside it, and kept in one of several cells, which can theoretically hold him forever. Even worse, a command word (usually known by the mirror's owner) can call a prisoner's image forth to be questioned. (The potential for abuse by diabolical villains is great; fortunately, ''all'' prisoners in a mirror can be released by breaking it, which is rather easy.)
** The second ''Monster Manual'' in the 4th Edition describes a specific case, the fate of the Primordial Storralk, who challenged Demogorgon for the title of Prince of Demons and came very close to winning. Demogorgon spared him, but ripped his body to pieces, and used the still-living pieces to construct his throne room. Storralk still lives in this state, and the two-headed giants called ettins were originally spawned from his body, including Demogorgon's powerful [[TheDragon Exarch]] Trarak. (Legend says that Storralk can be released from his imprisonment if Tharak is slain and her heart burned upon Demogorgon's throne; the freed Primordial could prove a valuable ally for anyone who would challenge the Prince of Demons.)
** The splatbook ''Faces of Evil: The Fiends'' mentions the Tower of Incarnate Pain, under construction by the yugoloths on Carceri. It is made of both dead souls and any mortal beings who come too close to it; they are absorbed by the Tower and turned into bricks. Fortunately, all victims have been allowed to die eventually, because the yugoloths can't seem to keep the thing up. Three times, the geheleths have attacked the Tower and torn it into pieces, the absorbed victims screaming in the process.
** It's hard to feel sorry for an [[EldritchAbomination aboleth]], but as aquatic creatures, they can't breathe air for very long, but they do ''not'' "drown" if they are separated from the water too long. Instead, they enter a state called the "long dreaming", which they consider far worse than death; a thick membrane forms around the aboleth, and it enters a state of suspended animation where -- depending on the edition -- it either experiences hideous nightmares or remains fully aware and cognizant of the world around but unable to move or use its psionic powers; an aboleth can survive forever in this state, remaining in the long dreaming however long it takes for it to become submerged again. (Of course, an aboleth in such a state is a sitting duck if an enemy -- which is most other races -- finds it, so it's usually killed soon anyway.)
** The splatbook ''Hordes of the Abyss'' from 3.5 edition expands upon DemonicPossession and what it entails. One in particular, the [[BalefulPolymorph transformer]] possession, allows the possessing demon to transform part of their host's body into a demonic shape. This trope comes into play when the demon completely transforms the victim; the book says "the demon has essentially replaced" the victim, leaving them trapped inside with no way to communicate or even [[FightingFromTheInside fight from within]] AND having [[ForcedToWatch to see every atrocity the demon is committing]].
** The accompanying ''Tyrants of the Nine Hells'' describes a variety of Baatezu called the Nupperibo. These unfortunate devils have [[YouHaveFailedMe failed]] their superiors in some way, so they're carted off to be tortured and mutilated as part of their demotion to a lower form of fiend. They get their [[EyeScream eyes]] and {{mouth stitched shut}}, their ears are filled with lead, their bodies are pumped full of all manner of foulness until they're bloated with corruption, and finally their brains are extracted through their nostrils. The result is a blind, deaf, mute, mindless wretch that can serve as CannonFodder in the Blood War, a beast of burden/slave laborer, and a very potent reminder of the price of failure.
** Levistus, Lord of the Fifth, has been stripped of his lordship and imprisoned inside a chunk of ice by Asmodeus for killing the Queen of Hell. After awhile, for reasons of his own, Asmodeus restored Levistus to his former position... without freeing him from the ice.
** Kyuss, an Elder Evil, is fully awake and aware within the obelisk where he's inprisoned, and has been such for all the millennia he has spent within it. He has never been able to breach it or escape, and can do nothing but beat against its walls, scream in impotent fury, and go more and more insane.
** ''The Book of Vile Darkness'' has a charming spell called ''eternity of torture''. It makes its subject immortal, [[TheNeedless while also making it so that they no longer need to eat or drink]]. Oh, and it subjects them to unimaginable agony in the process. The perfect tool for that 17th-level wizard who [[FateWorseThanDeath thinks just killing their enemies is too good for them]].
* ''TabletopGame/{{Ravenloft}}'' has a monster known as the Wall of Flesh. It's created when the rage and fear of a person who has been imprisoned within a wall mixes with ''Ravenloft's'' special flavor of magic. Several named [=NPCs=] of the Land of Mists have likewise suffered this fate. Elise Mordenheim, trapped in a decaying and shattered body that her MadScientist husband struggles in vain to restore, is perhaps the most prominent example.
* In the ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'' campaign setting for ''Dungeons & Dragons'', this is the fate of all souls that are judged to be Faithless or False (that is, being a FlatEarthAtheist or subverting the faith you profess to) without another god interceding on their behalf: Their souls are stuck in the Wall of the Faithless, to spend eternity as mortar for the Wall while their souls are slowly digested into nothingness. The Wall was constructed by [[JerkassGods Myrkul]], former God of the Dead, simply because it was his prerogative to decide what would happen to souls that no-one else would take responsibility for. By the time Myrkul was dethroned many centuries later, the Wall had become a necessity because GodsNeedPrayerBadly.
* The Transmogrification spell from ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}: Magic'' keeps the target's mind intact and active but makes them in to an inanimate object for a while. The Entombment spell traps the target in a tiny bubble deep beneath the earth for eternity unless it is somehow undone.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'', like ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'', has soulforging as a common practice in the Underworld. It goes past "common" -- soulsteel is considered one of the [[ElementalCrafting five magical materials]], and the Deathlords are all too willing to make their undead subjects into arms and armor for their Abyssal soldiers.
** Made worse in that soulsteel was around before there was an Underworld. [[spoiler:Autochthon, the great maker, had a race he made that pissed him off so much that he melted their entire civilization into slag and removed all references to them, and THEN took their souls and forged them into soulsteel inside his body.]]
** The Ebon Dragon has Charms that allow him to banish victims to a horrifying darkness beyond reality where they are completely alone and from which there is no escape.
** The Neverborn, who are simply too powerful to die, are locked in an eternal nightmare from which there is no obvious escape. This is how they can be sympathetic despite their plan (insofar as they are sane enough to have one) being the complete obliteration of everything that exists -- because this is quite possibly the only way for them to finally escape.
* In ''TabletopGame/BurningEmpires'', [[PuppeteerParasite infection by a Vaylen]] is treated much the same way as character permadeath because the infected character is irreversibly rendered unable to control its own body, effectively comatose, ''even'' when there's no worm driving it around.
* In ''TabletopGame/MonstersAndOtherChildishThings'', the empty skin of a person an Excruciator has hollowed out into a LivingBodysuit is explicitly mentioned to be still live and conscious. No, the game doesn't even ''hint'' that there's any way to restore a person from this.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Cyberpunk}}'': The canonical fiction ''Cyberpunk 2020'' has Alt Cunningham's personality/mind transferred into cyberspace by the evil Arasaka Corporation. When the connection to her lifeless body is severed, she becomes permanently trapped in there: "Behind the walls of monitors, a disembodied Alt screams to [her boyfriend]".
** Made even worse for 'Borgs. Many full body conversions have a human brain as a plug-n-play WetwareCPU. They are like the Servitors of Warhammer 40K, but the brains can be put into another body. One conversion, the Dragoon, combines this trope with AndIMustScream. The cyberware and the drugs keep the thing (barely) controlled. It acts almost like a dumb robot. But your character can recover some humanity loss by moving into another body. Just now he/she has horrible nightmares and flashbacks from having been a 7 foot tall killing machine.
* While the Immortality gift from ''TabletopGame/{{Nobilis}}'' explicitly protects you from attempts to pull this, this doesn't stop it being played straight in some of the border fictions.
* ''TabletopGame/BleakWorld'': The [[GoneHorriblyWrong Experiments Gone Horribly Wrong]] are defined by multiple different personalities that cannot directly control the body, but can talk to the prime consciousness. However, various perks allow experiments to silence, but not outright destroy, these personalities. Essentially this traps them in a state where they can see and experience everything they do, but never even affect the decision.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'':
** In its natural form, the Great Old One Mhar is composed entirely of molten rock. Its most commonly depicted, mountainous appearance is the result of its lava cooling and solidifying in response to less-than-infernal temperatures, a process that Mhar finds agonizing. It tries to alleviate its suffering by sleeping within planetary cores, but these inevitably cool and reawaken it to its pain. Its current residence on Golarion is the result of a failed attempt to escape into the Plane of Fire, which left it trapped within Golarion's crust. As a result, Mhar has spent the last several thousand years trapped in a prison it cannot escape, being driven ever more insane by the agony of its solidified state.
** One of the potential results of failing your save when using the Codex of Infinite Planes is to have your soul permanently bound to your body and cut off from the normal cycle of life and death. If you die after this happens, your consciousness remains trapped within your body, which no longer decays but which you lose all ability to control.
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[[folder:Theatre]]
* Downplayed and even made [[PlayedForLaughs slightly humorous]] in Stephen Sondheim's ''Theatre/SundayInTheParkWithGeorge.'' At the end of Act One, all of the characters we've seen throughout the first act form a living tableau of ''A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte'', Georges Seurat's masterpiece. It's a beautiful, powerful image... until Act Two begins. It's been one hundred years, and the people in that idyllic park scene have been trapped there for all of that time. While they're able to stretch slightly, they can only do so for a few seconds before they have to return to their positions. Time has stopped for them, and while they can't age, they're also wearing many thick layers of clothing on a blisteringly hot summer day, surrounded by people they've come to despise in the past century, and frozen exactly as they were the moment the painting was finished (a little girl with bad vision isn't wearing her glasses, so her vision will always be hopelessly blurred, ''and'' her hands are sticky; a boatman with bad hygiene has his odor lingering around him--and those sitting near him--and so on). And so long as art historians keep restoring ''La Grande Jatte,'' they're going to be stuck like that ''forever.''
* In the musical adaptation of ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast'', the Enchantress's curse becomes one of these. Rather than automatically changing the Prince and his servants into a hideous beast and random household objects (presumably because there was no way to costume that convincingly), the spell instead works extremely slowly; the humans retain their normal sizes and shapes, but as time passes, they become more thing-like as their human features and appendages are gradually replaced with inanimate parts. It's never made clear whether or not completely transforming into an object (a fate that's befallen some of the servants already) kills you or traps your still-conscious mind in a piece of bric-a-brac without any sensory organs, but still very much alive.
* ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' has a particularly ambiguous and downright disturbing example. It's said throughout the play that animals are losing their power of speech, and if applicable, their ability to walk on two legs. But we're never told whether or not they actually remember when they could walk and talk, leaving one of two possibilities: either they have forgotten their own sentience, or they are ''psychologically tortured to the point of not speaking out for fear something will happen.'' Something Bad indeed.
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[[folder:Theme Parks]]
* A subtle example in the queue for ''Ride/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyMissionBreakout''. One of the artifact cases contains [[Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron a damaged Ultron drone]] that makes vague threats of destroying humanity. Assuming that every other Ultron drone was destroyed (as is the case at the end of ''Age of Ultron''), then that drone contains all of Ultron's massive code and consciousness, but is barely able to talk, let alone function.
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[[folder:Toys]]
* ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'' has the EldritchAbomination Tren Krom, who had his body sealed into an island and was rendered completely immobile. Furthermore, he was so hideous that anyone who looked at him ran the risk of going insane. Then, he went and tricked [[TheChewToy Lewa]] into switching bodies with him, leaving poor Lewa stranded on an isolated island in a monstrous, tentacled body, unable to move around, not being able to speak except via telepathy, and with no hope of rescue since his friends think he's still with them, if acting a bit strangely. It got reversed in the end, and after a while, Tren Krom was finally granted his freedom. And then murdered off screen instantly.
* According to Sine's backstory in ''Toys/LittleAppleDolls'' she was transported to a purgatory full of people stuck in this fate after she died. It's referred to as "the in between" between life and death.
-->The Little Girl saw many like her. They were pale and hollow eyed. Lost and lonely. Some, their eyes sealed shut and their mouths wiped away. They could not speak. They could not see. Their time before, was cut short by being real sick and having their lives taken by force. A little boy ran up towards her and shook her; he was speaking but she could not understand. He spoke in rustling leaves and sirens.
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** Made even worse for 'Borgs. Many full body conversions have a human brain as a plug-n-play WetwareCPU. They are like the Servitors of Warhammer 40K, but the brains can be put into another body. One conversion, the Dragoon, combines this trope with AndIMustScream. The cyberware and the drugs keep the thing (barely) controlled. It acts almost like a dumb robot. But your character can recover some humanity loss by moving into another body. Just now he/she has horrible nightmares and flashbacks from being was a 7 foot tall killing machine.

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** Made even worse for 'Borgs. Many full body conversions have a human brain as a plug-n-play WetwareCPU. They are like the Servitors of Warhammer 40K, but the brains can be put into another body. One conversion, the Dragoon, combines this trope with AndIMustScream. The cyberware and the drugs keep the thing (barely) controlled. It acts almost like a dumb robot. But your character can recover some humanity loss by moving into another body. Just now he/she has horrible nightmares and flashbacks from being was having been a 7 foot tall killing machine.
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*** It's later revealed that [[spoiler:Fulgrim had successfully regain control of his body, and he trapped the daemon in the portrait he was trapped in, and fully embraced his new form as a Daemon Prince.]]

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*** It's later revealed that [[spoiler:Fulgrim had successfully regain regained control of his body, and he body. He trapped the daemon in the portrait he that Fulgrim was formerly trapped in, and fully embraced his new form as a Daemon Prince.]]
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** The accompanying ''Tyrants of the Nine Hells'' describes a variety of Baatezu called the Nupperibo. These unfortunate devils have [[YouHaveFailedMe failed]] their superiors in some way, so they're carted off to be tortured and mutilated as part of their demotion to a lower form of fiend. Their get their [[EyeScream eyes]] and {{mouth stitched shut}}, their ears are filled with lead, their bodies are pumped full of all manner of foulness until they're bloated with corruption, and finally their brains are extracted through their nostrils. The result is a blind, deaf, mute, mindless wretch that can serve as CannonFodder in the Blood War, a beast of burden/slave laborer, and a very potent reminder of the price of failure.

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** The accompanying ''Tyrants of the Nine Hells'' describes a variety of Baatezu called the Nupperibo. These unfortunate devils have [[YouHaveFailedMe failed]] their superiors in some way, so they're carted off to be tortured and mutilated as part of their demotion to a lower form of fiend. Their They get their [[EyeScream eyes]] and {{mouth stitched shut}}, their ears are filled with lead, their bodies are pumped full of all manner of foulness until they're bloated with corruption, and finally their brains are extracted through their nostrils. The result is a blind, deaf, mute, mindless wretch that can serve as CannonFodder in the Blood War, a beast of burden/slave laborer, and a very potent reminder of the price of failure.
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* Music/{{Mothy}}'s [[Franchise/EvilliousChronicles Re_Birthday]] is the theme song of this trope. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zpl1uMEWM_g Just listen to it!]] [[spoiler: For any not wanting to click the link, basically he's trapped in darkness where he can't hear or see anything and based on manual information it is most possibly the womb of a small doll.]]

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* Music/{{Mothy}}'s [[Franchise/EvilliousChronicles Re_Birthday]] ''Music/EvilliousChronicles'': "Re_Birthday" is the theme song of this trope. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zpl1uMEWM_g Just listen to it!]] [[spoiler: For [[spoiler:For any not wanting to click the link, basically he's trapped in darkness where he can't hear or see anything and based on manual information it is most possibly the womb of a small doll.]]
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Usually, when this arises, it is eternal unless he's freed by outside forces, but a "mere" years-long or centuries-long fate is possible. For instance, a robot with a 100-year battery life getting buried underground. In fact, this is a very common sci-fi trope involving artificial intelligences who are potentially immortal due to being made of software. Unfortunately, if a victim ''is'' rescued, he may well [[GoMadFromTheIsolation have been driven insane from the experience.]] (Some of the listed examples show exactly that.)

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Usually, when this arises, it is eternal unless he's freed by outside forces, but a "mere" years-long or centuries-long fate is possible. For instance, a robot with a 100-year battery life getting buried underground. In fact, this is a very common sci-fi trope involving artificial intelligences who are potentially immortal due to being made of software. Unfortunately, if a victim ''is'' rescued, he may well [[GoMadFromTheIsolation have been driven insane from the experience.]] experience]]. (Some of the listed examples show exactly that.)



* "The Ballad of Barry Allen" by Music/JimsBigEgo is an AlternativeCharacterInterpretation of ComicBook/TheFlash which tries to apply FridgeLogic to his SuperSpeed, imagining him trapped in a world where TimeStandsStill.

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* "The Ballad of Barry Allen" by Music/JimsBigEgo is an AlternativeCharacterInterpretation of ComicBook/TheFlash Franchise/TheFlash which tries to apply FridgeLogic to his SuperSpeed, imagining him trapped in a world where TimeStandsStill.
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*** Similarly, the Hierarchy in ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'' does this to whoever causes too much trouble. Their ghostly corpus is "soulforged," boiled down and rendered into a permanent shape, be it a sword, a coin, or an ashtray. However, official word as of the 2nd edition is that Soulforging destroys the consciousness of the ghost being soulforged.

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*** Similarly, the Hierarchy in ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'' does this to whoever causes too much trouble. Their ghostly corpus is "soulforged," boiled down and rendered into a permanent shape, be it a sword, a coin, or an ashtray. A similar process exists through the arts of Moliate, where the wraith is effectively lobotomized and turned into something more suitable, be it a barghest for Legionnaire patrols or a high-ranking wraith's chaise lounge. However, official word as of the 2nd edition is that Soulforging destroys the consciousness of the ghost being soulforged.soulforged... though wraiths don't know that for sure, as there are magical arts that let them extract knowledge from the forged soul. Oh, and the fact that soulsteel occasionally weeps and moans.
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* [[AndIMustScream/AnimatedFilms Film — Animation]]
* [[AndIMustScream/LiveActionFilms Film — Live-Action]]

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* [[AndIMustScream/AnimatedFilms Film Films — Animation]]
* [[AndIMustScream/LiveActionFilms Film Films — Live-Action]]
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* "The Ballad of Barry Allen" by Music/JimsBigEgo is an AlternativeCharacterInterpretation of ComicBook/TheFlash which tries to apply FridgeLogic to his SuperSpeed, imagining him trapped in a world where TimeStandsStill.
--->''I wish I'd never gone into my lab\\
To experiment that night\\
Before lightning flashed around me\\
And time changed speed\\
Now I gotta try to be so patient until calamity will strike\\
Because when things change in an instant\\
It's almost fast enough for me''
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** ''The Book of Vile Darkness'' has a charming spell called ''eternity of torture''. It makes its subject immortal, [[TheNeedless while also making it so that they no longer need to eat or drink]]. Oh, and it subjects them to unimaginable agony in the process. The perfect tool for that 17th-level wizard who [[FateWorseThanDeath thinks just killing their enemies is too good for them]].

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