
I urge everybody who participates in posting on forums on the internet to read this and think about it as it relates to said activity and you:
It appears to be human nature inherent in good, caring and empathic people to want to and enjoy providing consoling words and helpful advice whenever and wherever they perceive it as in order. I simply ask that before one does as so, that they take a brief pause first, re-read that to which they plan to reply/respond/comment and ask themselves the following:
Is this person who's writing that I plan to reply/respond/comment on, directly or indirectly ASKING for advice or consoling words or are they simply having fun or neither?
Generally and for the most part, a seasoned internet forum poster can tell by the ENTIRE post of another, particularly from that poster's choice of words, the general tone and the introducing and conclusive sentences of a post, if that poster is enjoying him/herself or if that poster was (and therefore may still be) hurting.
I have sometimes heard that there can be no harm in assuming someone is hurting and in need of consolation and/or advice but I would beg to differ in that thought line. Sometimes one person's unsolicited advice and/or consolation may actually ruin or detract from the fun of another by and in a way I find hard enough to describe as yet other than to say: being a downer or blowing it. That said, it is universally understood that any internet post is an open invitation to comment and there will always be misunderstandings within internet forums with regard to meaning, intent, motivation and interest.
- Just sort of some food for thought and perhaps me thinking out loud. Peace out and may all be as good to all as all can be as far as all good is known to be. - w
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'Answer' to the deductive reasoning suggestion above as applied to the above entire post:
The writer of the above post is NEITHER asking for advice or consolation nor is simply having fun.
