Plinco
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2008
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I'm the same way. The girl I'm dating loves that I don't have a facebook, it does indeed add alot of mystery. It gives me a reason for her to come over and "look at my pictures".WayOfTheDragon said:This was a good video. Personally, I'm not, and have never been on Facebook. I'm 25 and the only person I know (from being told by others) that's not on the website.
I never tell people I'm not on Facebook, but when they find out, it adds a real mystery to me. It's seems as if some girls eyes light up when they ask and I say no, especially sense I'm an outgoing and social person.
Give it a shot and drop the site. I swear you can use it to your advantage.
BINGO. This is what I was looking for! +1 repDesert Fox said:I'm in college and don't have a facebook. Impossible you say? No, I just understand stuff on the internet is written in ink. And if it's tied to your name, well good luck with that.
And I agree with the mystery thing, although when girls ask for my facebook I say, "don't have one, give me your number instead and maybe we'll hang out sometime." Boom done. Easy. Of course, I never save their number because I'm not interested at all 90% of the time.
Just because a woman listens to you and acts interested in what you say doesn't mean she really is. She might just be acting polite, while silently wishing that the date would hurry up and end, or that you would go away... and never come back.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
I also don't like how people loosely throw around the word 'addiction,' which is properly defined as the inability to stop a behavior in spite of pervasive negative consequences, and I'm skeptical Internet addiction even exists. Heavy usage is not the same thing as addiction. What happens to most people when the power goes out, cell phone receptivity drops, or when someone is invited to a dinner?—why, they go out and socialize. Not everyone is highly sociable, either. It's a difference in personality. They certainly might benefit from putting down their smartphones and force themselves to be more engaging, but it's not for you to ride on some righteous high horse and claim they have an 'addiction'.Baroness Susan Greenfield has been spouting off some bad neuroscience, I'm afraid. She's on an anti-social-networking-software, anti-computer-games, anti-computer crusade that sounds a bit familiar — it's just like the anti-TV tirades I've heard for 40-some years — and a little bit new — computers are bad because they are "changing the workings of the brain". Ooooh.
But to put that in perspective, the brain is a plastic organ that is supposed to rewire itself in response to experience. It's what they do. The alternative is to have a fixed reaction pattern that doesn't improve itself, which would be far worse. Greenfield is throwing around neuroscientific jargon to scare people.
So yes, using computers all the time and chatting in the comments sections of weird web sites will modify the circuitry of the brain and have consequences that will affect the way you think. Maybe I should put a disclaimer on the text boxes on this site. However, there are events that will scramble your brains even more: for example, falling in love. I don't want to imagine the frantic rewiring that has to go on inside your head in response to that, or the way it can change the way you see the entire rest of the world, for good or bad, for the whole of your life... Will Baroness Greenfield give up her book-writin', lecturin' ways to fire-harden a pointy stick, don a burlap bag, and dedicate her life to hunting rabbits?
Humor me. What is the full peril of their situation?It destroys lives and the addicted does not realize the full peril of their situation.
That's the way I feel. If I had to rap up Facebook in word: VANITY.TyTe`EyEz said:Facebook leads to feelings of jealousy and vanity - neither of which is healthy.
This is true for SOME but this whole post is speaking for the masses...again. It was the same way with Myspace (remember that?) but face book is on a much larger scale. Social networking is more than just an ego trip. I keep touch with my family members, some of whom live over seas, most of whom live at least across the country from me. It's nice to see pictures of my little cousins as they enter college and being able to talk to view video of my grand parents in their golden years all in the same place.TyTe`EyEz said:Facebook leads to feelings of jealousy and vanity - neither is healthy.
PRMoon said:This is true for SOME but this whole post is speaking for the masses...again. It was the same way with Myspace (remember that?) but face book is on a much larger scale. Social networking is more than just an ego trip. I keep touch with my family members, some of whom live over seas, most of whom live at least across the country from me. It's nice to see pictures of my little cousins as they enter college and being able to talk to view video of my grand parents in their golden years all in the same place.
But forget about all that. Social media is gaining a bigger foot hole in the work place. If any of you have any interest in some form of marketing, it's almost essential for you to have involvement in some form of social media. The vice president of marketing for the company I work for called face book a "living resume" because it displays how well you interact with the masses.
Yes if you use facebook for the sole purpose of pretending you have friends then you likely have some problems. But like anything else, it's all a matter of what you do with the equipment and time you're offered that makes you a productive person or leaves you a waste of space.
Yes. Maybe I'm one of the few who look at other people's profiles and compare myself to them. Maybe I'm in the minority when I get jealous of xxxx for making more money than me; for having a hotter girl than me; for attending a better school than me. Yeah fvcking right. This is what EVERYBODY on Facebook does. Nobody is immune to feelings of jealousy and vanity. Maybe you, but that's it.PRMoon said:This is true for SOME