On Apr 19, 7:03 pm, Panurge <panu...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Troia <troia.leg...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > agsf...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>
> > > Hahahaha!!!!! Socially Challenged to the extreme!
>
> And the usual boilerplate follows--I guess you can do it blindfolded by
> now, can't you?
Cmon, you make it too easy.
> Assholes, trolls, dip****s, people who hang around on
> the Internet to laugh at others from a safe distance--*those* people are
> "socially challenged".
Only if you consider this your social medium.
> Hell, *job*? Try thinking this through for half a second, OK?
Ok...
> I mean,
> I *am* going to Whitby *on savings*,
You should use your disposable income, but Ok...
> y'know--to see people who are worth
> *crossing an ocean* to see occasionally.
And, of course, I disagree. Especially since you were not content the
last time. Instead, I would travel to new places and see new
cultures.
> I have those people *in
> addition to* the friends I already have--sorry if you can't wrap your
> head around that concept.
Let's be honest here. What kind of friend****p do you have with these
people? How do they differ from your local friends (which I doubt you
have)? Seriously, if you were content with your local friends, you
would not want to meet people who live more than 30-60 minutes away.
> Obviously you don't have people like that in
> your life--sorry they don't meet with your seal of approval. (OTOH, if
> they did I might not want to know them.)
You're right. My friends are local. I lost some good friends because
either I moved or they moved far away. I rarely see them, and if I
did, they have their new circle of friends and their normal routines.
Ever visited a close friend a few years after they moved to another
state? How it felt weird being with your friend and his new friends?
I think the same thing applies to friends who get married.
> But I'll tell you this--getting under the skins of people like you is
> one of the *prime benefits* of being Flagrantly Freaky, so just keep on
> wasting your time online if you feel you have to.
Well, you're not 17 so you can stop rebelling. If you made an effort
to normalize yourself, you wouldn't have the need to travel a great
distance to meet your "friends".
> I mean, look, if I've
> made friends with my time online, that's a lot more than you've gotten
> out of yours; what have you gotten besides a few cheap laughs at (what
> you imagine is) Them Damn Freaks' expense?
Entertainment, new ideas and thoughts regarding certain subjects, some
great debates, information regarding current events, etc.
Regards...


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