Aiden Vale
Aiden Vale | |
|---|---|
| Born | October 17, 2001 Austin, Texas, United States |
| Nationality | American |
| Occupation | Freelance designer |
| Years active | 2023–present |
| Known for | Central figure in The Mint Requiem incident |
| Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". | Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". |
Aiden Vale (born 17 October 2001) is an American freelance designer and writer, widely known as the central figure in the psychological event series commonly referred to as The Mint Requiem'. The case, which drew significant attention in 2025, centers around Vale’s involvement in a chain of unexplained psychological and paranormal incidents linked to a now-defunct dental clinic in Travis County, Texas.
The subject of several speculative investigations, internet folklore, and dramatized reconstructions, Vale’s personal writings, interviews, and documented psychological assessments have contributed to the cult status of the Mint Requiem timeline. His alleged sightings of a woman known only as "Mint Girl," along with themes of mirrored realities and dental experimentation, have formed the basis of both psychological study and internet myth.
Early life
Aiden Vale was born in Austin, Texas, in 2001. He was raised in a middle-class household and attended public school, showing early interest in design, writing, and digital art. Vale attended community college for two years before beginning freelance design work for small businesses and independent creative projects.
The Mint Girl incident
Background and lead-up
In the months preceding the incident at the dental clinic, Vale had reportedly been undergoing treatment for recurring tension headaches and jaw discomfort, which he described as “a dull pressure behind the eyes.” He visited several local dentists, eventually receiving a referral to the West Harrow Dental Group—a private practice with limited online presence and no listed specialists. According to messages retrieved from his emails, Vale was initially reluctant to attend the appointment, stating in one draft: “Something about that place feels off. Like it’s too clean, like it’s waiting for me.”
Around the same period, friends and colleagues noted a shift in Vale’s behavior. He became increasingly withdrawn, frequently referencing a sense of being “followed by moments,” and claiming that certain reflections in shop windows “didn’t sync up” with his movements. In a group chat, he once joked about “needing a dentist for the soul,” a line that would later be quoted in several fan adaptations and academic papers.
The morning of his appointment—18 October 2024—Vale wrote a journal entry describing a vivid dream in which he was trapped in a white, humming room with no doors, being asked silent questions by people with smiles but no eyes. He concluded the entry with: “My mouth hurts, but my memory hurts more.”
That afternoon, he walked into the waiting room of West Harrow Dental for what was, according to multiple timelines and interpretations, his last unfractured moment.
The Mint Girl encounter
On 18 October 2024, Vale reportedly experienced what he described as a "formative romantic fixation" after a brief encounter with an unidentified young woman in a dentist’s waiting room. According to his personal notes and later interviews, the woman dropped a breath mint while exiting the room, which Vale pocketed and kept. This event, trivial to most, became a focal point in Vale’s personal writings over the following months.
Witnesses in the waiting room at the time recalled little about the woman, other than her quiet demeanor and the fact that she seemed “disinterested, almost annoyed” during her brief stay. Vale, however, would later describe the moment as “cinematically unreal,” claiming that their eyes met just before she dropped the mint—an event he interpreted as a “nonverbal handoff” or omen.
The mint, which he preserved in a small plastic bag labeled with the date and time, became what Vale referred to in his journals as a “static anchor”—a term he later associated with lucid memory retention and emotional echoing. He began referencing the event in design sketches, poems, and voice memos, often assigning the woman mythic qualities and referring to her only as “Mint Girl.”
In a voice recording dated 22 November 2024, Vale stated, “I don’t even know if she’s real anymore, or if I just projected the idea of her into that moment. Either way… I think she’s part of me now.” Mental health professionals reviewing these early writings later noted signs of parasocial delusion and early onset derealization, though no formal diagnosis was made at the time. Online forums would later debate whether Mint Girl was ever real, or a construct triggered by a latent psychogenic response during a period of stress.
The Mint Requiem incident
In April 2025, one year after the initial encounter, Vale returned to the clinic, only to discover it had been destroyed in a fire under circumstances the local fire department described as “deliberate but unexplained.” Following the visit, Vale’s behavior became increasingly erratic. He claimed to experience dissociative episodes, visual hallucinations, and gaps in memory.
In a widely-circulated Reddit post later verified to have been authored by Vale, he described discovering a hidden protocol known as the "Patient Reflection Program", which allegedly involved dental experimentation tied to psychological fragmentation and alternate mirrored realities. The post referenced the presence of multiple identical mints, dreamlike time slips, and a “burned clinic beneath the clinic.”
These claims, dismissed by authorities as delusional, became the center of a growing internet mythos. Several local residents later reported recurring dreams involving "mirror dentists" and disappearing appointments. A FOIA request for the clinic’s former patient list revealed a redacted file containing Vale’s name and a next appointment date listed as "6 days ago."
Surveillance footage from nearby buildings was reportedly corrupted, and witnesses described strange electrical malfunctions in the area at the time of the fire. A partially recovered fire inspection document mentioned heat signatures “inconsistent with standard combustibles,” and noted structural damage to an underground section of the clinic not listed in public blueprints.
Following the visit, Vale’s personal journals—later released online in fragments—describe frequent blackouts, auditory distortions, and visions of a “burned hallway that shouldn’t exist.” Friends reported he began obsessively sketching dental instruments merged with mirrors and frequently mentioned a “second waiting room beneath the first.”
The post was titled Reflection 0.1 and was pinned with the caption: “You were there too. Look at your dental records.” In it, Vale outlined his belief that the Patient Reflection Program was designed to fracture the self through memory dislocation and optical anchoring—procedures allegedly performed using mirrored dental tools in unauthorized sub-clinical spaces.
One notable claim was that he found multiple identical mints in his pocket after dreams, each slightly decayed in different ways. He also described waking up with teeth slightly rearranged in his mouth, and claimed that brushing with mint toothpaste caused “interference” with what he called “mirror bleed.”
These posts, though deleted within hours, were archived and widely circulated across forums, sparking amateur investigations and content creator deep-dives. One independent researcher matched elements of Vale’s sketches to an abandoned experimental dental grant proposal filed in 2003 under the codename “R.E.F.L.E.C.T.”
Public response and legacy
Vale has become a cult figure in digital horror communities and speculative fiction circles. His writings were compiled and published anonymously online under the title Requiem for a Waiting Room. A dramatized retelling of his story, titled *Mirror Tooth*, was released on streaming platforms in 2026, further fueling public interest in the case. Some academics have analyzed Vale’s experience through the lens of dissociative identity disorder, while others cite it as an example of modern myth-making and post-reality storytelling.
In popular culture
Television
- The 2026 streaming series Mirror Tooth is loosely based on Vale’s case.
Video games
- Several indie games released between 2025 and 2027 include references to "the Mint Box" and "The Other Waiting Room".
- Internet creepypasta writers often cite Vale’s timeline as foundational in a new genre known as "dental liminal horror".
See also
References