Collarspace Discussion Forums


Home  Login  Search 

How does emotion figure into your on-line interactions?


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid >> How does emotion figure into your on-line interactions? Page: [1] 2 3 4 5   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
How does emotion figure into your on-line interactions? - 12/9/2011 7:11:11 AM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
Status: offline
This is actually a topic that comes up quite regularly in my brain.

I tend to like to jump into the occasional 'hot topic' thread. But usually only when I have an alternate point of view than has been expressed, or is being held by the majority.

Quite often, I get comments in reply to my posting that indicates that person/s think I am angry, upset, whatever. Now I totally understand, based upon my posting style and my knowledge of human behaviour.......how and why this happens. It usually causes me to chuckle because I know the truth. Most of the time I am posting with very little emotion and what emotion I do have is either humour, or mild annoyance. Rather like that of having a harmless gnat flying around in your face.

IF I feel that stronger, especially negative, emotions are beginning to brew........I walk away. My personal promise to myself is that, if I ever allow random idiots on the internet to upset me, then it is time for me to not be on the internet. Similarly, I don't understand how anyone can have deep, positive feelings or emotions, to a person they've only communicated with via the net. It's just not......real.....to me.

Oh sure, I can type off a "XXX I just loooooooove you!", or a "YYYY, this is why I like you!" But it's the words they've typed that I love or like. I know with absolute, that I do not really know the person......nothing to really love or like. Only the bits they express via their words. Similarly, there is no one I hate or even intensely dislike. The views they express, yes. But them, the person....no. Not really.

Aside from being thought provoking, giving me fuel for my active ADD brain.......the people here, less than a handful, really affect ME outside of that thought creation. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy and appreciate reading other opinions, getting my brain off on some new tangent or other.......but if most of those same people disappear from my little internet world, rarely will there be a void. There is always a new typist ready to jump in and cause me to nearly forget those that disappear.

Don't get me wrong, I am not saying I feel nothing. That would be a lie. But it has become apparent to me, that what I do feel is not the same as others. That is where the disconnect is.

Perhaps I really am weird. Maybe there is something missing in my brain. I just don't understand the deep emotions that boil up into so many discussions. The anger and vitriol, the apparent hatred of people never met. I am okay with people making the accusation based upon their own behaviours being projected.....it's no skin off my arse. And it's a normal human thing to assume others are like us. I get that. I am just trying to understand what I am missing here. Why it's so important to 'feel' so much that is of no real consequence?


_____________________________

My twisted, self deprecating, sense of humour, finds alot to laugh about, in your lack of one!

Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!
Profile   Post #: 1
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:35:33 AM   
DaddySatyr


Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011
From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky
Status: offline
With only a very few exceptions (people that suffer from grave mental/emotional disorders), I don't see how anyone can be completely dis-passionate about a subject upon which they have formed an opinion.

I would suggest that the very fact that they've formed an opinion suggests a certain amount of "emotional involvement". I think the very nature of being human beings means that some amount of emotion is involved in the reasoning process.

Having said that, I am passionate about a few subjects and therefore; have very strong opinions about them. The only times I have ever gotten angry is when an ad hominem attack has been launched which I know to be untrue (either about me or someone else). Firstly, in civilized debate, personal attacks have no place. They don't move the discussion forward and they're just beneath people who are supposed to be loving, sentient, beings.



Peace and comfort,



Michael


_____________________________

A Stone in My Shoe

Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me?

"For that which I love, I will do horrible things"

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 2
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:44:57 AM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr

With only a very few exceptions (people that suffer from grave mental/emotional disorders), I don't see how anyone can be completely dis-passionate about a subject upon which they have formed an opinion.

I would suggest that the very fact that they've formed an opinion suggests a certain amount of "emotional involvement". I think the very nature of being human beings means that some amount of emotion is involved in the reasoning process.

Having said that, I am passionate about a few subjects and therefore; have very strong opinions about them. The only times I have ever gotten angry is when an ad hominem attack has been launched which I know to be untrue (either about me or someone else). Firstly, in civilized debate, personal attacks have no place. They don't move the discussion forward and they're just beneath people who are supposed to be loving, sentient, beings.

Peace and comfort,

Michael



I completely understand your first two paragraphs. Certainly there is some amount of emotion in all aspects of our lives.

It is the third paragraph I don't get, the getting angry at words on a screen typed by people you do not know well enough to care what they think.

If I sincerely care about a person, respect that person.......then what they think really matters to me. It's the whole, being clueless about the type of person that is sitting on the other side.......that's what I struggle with. If I don't care about the person, if I don't have any respect for their opinions, then I don't really care what they think about me or my opinions. That's where I can't be arsed to be upset.


_____________________________

My twisted, self deprecating, sense of humour, finds alot to laugh about, in your lack of one!

Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!

(in reply to DaddySatyr)
Profile   Post #: 3
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:46:21 AM   
LizDeluxe


Posts: 687
Joined: 10/2/2011
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: LaTigresse
I just don't understand the deep emotions that boil up into so many discussions. The anger and vitriol, the apparent hatred of people never met.


Like you, I don't let anonymous folks online get under my skin. Never have and never will. Having said that - let's say you visit an online forum such as this one for months or years and see some of the same posters day in and day out. You see their posting style and learn a bit about their thought process and ideas and values even. You have not met them in person. You may not know their real name or ever have seen their face even in photos but over time you do get to know a side of them that is projected in the forum. It may differ from their real life personality but that is largely irrelevant if you are likely never to meet and know them in person.

The point I am trying to make is that you can have a connection with that party even though your only interaction is in a forum like this. I have had the opportunity to meet people in real life many times with whom I had only previously communicated online with in some form be it forums or online chat. In most cases those people were not radically different in person from what was reflected online. Since the parallel is there it would follow that the parallel of getting pissed off at them would follow sometimes. Getting your tit in a wringer over an anonymous one off comment in the comments section below a news story is one thing. Having the same thing happen in a forum where you have been a participant for a while is a different story, I think. I still do not do this but I understand why it happens.



(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 4
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:47:43 AM   
VirginPotty


Posts: 11624
Joined: 7/16/2008
From: Virginville
Status: offline
quote:

Why it's so important to 'feel' so much that is of no real consequence?


People hate to be wrong and like we've witnessed this week some will hold onto their stubborn belief that they are right and everyone around them is wrong. 

All the folks that are believed by the poster to be wrong fight to be right, to be THE ONE to break thru the stubborness of the poster that is actually in the wrong thus assuming that all future posts will be seen by others as....................: "We should believe what is said now and always.  THE ONE was able to breakthru the stubborn poster to make them see the error of their ways so obviously they are right about this too.....Let us all bow to the greatness that is THE ONE".

Or the above could be complete bullshit and foks are just sensitive.


_____________________________

Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.

(in reply to DaddySatyr)
Profile   Post #: 5
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:52:17 AM   
DaddySatyr


Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011
From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: LaTigresse
It is the third paragraph I don't get, the getting angry at words on a screen typed by people you do not know well enough to care what they think.

Well, this is probably just one of those areas where people have to agree to disagree. While I try not to take myself too seriously, our integrity/reputation/honor (take your pick) is all we truly have in this life. For someone to assail that is something (in my mind) which is worth defending.

Mind you, I'm not talking about cussing and spitting saliva out of my mouth and kicking the cat angry. I'm talking about: "I need to set the record straight on this" angry.



Peace and comfort,



Michael


_____________________________

A Stone in My Shoe

Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me?

"For that which I love, I will do horrible things"

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 6
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:56:14 AM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: VirginPotty

quote:

Why it's so important to 'feel' so much that is of no real consequence?


People hate to be wrong and like we've witnessed this week some will hold onto their stubborn belief that they are right and everyone around them is wrong. 

All the folks that are believed by the poster to be wrong fight to be right, to be THE ONE to break thru the stubborness of the poster that is actually in the wrong thus assuming that all future posts will be seen by others as....................: "We should believe what is said now and always.  THE ONE was able to breakthru the stubborn poster to make them see the error of their ways so obviously they are right about this too.....Let us all bow to the greatness that is THE ONE".

Or the above could be complete bullshit and foks are just sensitive.



Ah ha......now I am seeing something new that I had not thought of. That it might be more of a competitive thing driving the emotion rather than any sort of emotional attachment to the people involved.

If that is the case, it explains a lot.

Thank you VP!


_____________________________

My twisted, self deprecating, sense of humour, finds alot to laugh about, in your lack of one!

Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!

(in reply to VirginPotty)
Profile   Post #: 7
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:58:27 AM   
VirginPotty


Posts: 11624
Joined: 7/16/2008
From: Virginville
Status: offline
quote:

Ah ha......now I am seeing something new that I had not thought of. That it might be more of a competitive thing driving the emotion rather than any sort of emotional attachment to the people involved.

If that is the case, it explains a lot.

Thank you VP!


So today, in YOUR eyes I'm THE ONE!!!!!!



_____________________________

Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 8
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 7:58:35 AM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr


quote:

ORIGINAL: LaTigresse
It is the third paragraph I don't get, the getting angry at words on a screen typed by people you do not know well enough to care what they think.

Well, this is probably just one of those areas where people have to agree to disagree. While I try not to take myself too seriously, our integrity/reputation/honor (take your pick) is all we truly have in this life. For someone to assail that is something (in my mind) which is worth defending.

Mind you, I'm not talking about cussing and spitting saliva out of my mouth and kicking the cat angry. I'm talking about: "I need to set the record straight on this" angry.

Peace and comfort,

Michael



I understand what you are saying because I would be lying if I said that I do not share a desire to be seen as a person of integrity and honour. I think for me.......while it does matter to a small degree......if I do not see the person looking back at me as having a degree of the same, then their opinion of me matter so much less.

I do not care if a skunk thinks I smell good. It is a skunk. What does it know?


_____________________________

My twisted, self deprecating, sense of humour, finds alot to laugh about, in your lack of one!

Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!

(in reply to DaddySatyr)
Profile   Post #: 9
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:03:42 AM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: VirginPotty

quote:

Ah ha......now I am seeing something new that I had not thought of. That it might be more of a competitive thing driving the emotion rather than any sort of emotional attachment to the people involved.

If that is the case, it explains a lot.

Thank you VP!


So today, in YOUR eyes I'm THE ONE!!!!!!






I don't wish to offend so please don't take it that way. But yes and no. Your words took my brain down a new path but then again, some of our worst court jesters have also.

People intrigue me. Even when I was young I knew my brain sometimes didn't work the same as people around me. But what is normal and natural to me, feels like it should be with everyone. It is the subtleties that constantly surprise me. "What?!?!?! You don't feel that way?? Why not? I don't get it!"

Then again, I am not so arrogant to assume that I am special. I think we all are in our unique ways. We all have our little differences. I just enjoy exploring and discovering them.


_____________________________

My twisted, self deprecating, sense of humour, finds alot to laugh about, in your lack of one!

Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!

(in reply to VirginPotty)
Profile   Post #: 10
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:04:55 AM   
VirginPotty


Posts: 11624
Joined: 7/16/2008
From: Virginville
Status: offline

quote:

I don't wish to offend so please don't take it that way. But yes and no. Your words took my brain down a new path but then again, some of our worst court jesters have also.


Good enough!

_____________________________

Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 11
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:07:15 AM   
DaddySatyr


Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011
From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: LaTigresse

I understand what you are saying because I would be lying if I said that I do not share a desire to be seen as a person of integrity and honour. I think for me.......while it does matter to a small degree......if I do not see the person looking back at me as having a degree of the same, then their opinion of me matter so much less.

I do not care if a skunk thinks I smell good. It is a skunk. What does it know?



I agree with that, for the most part. As a writer and a strong advocate for free speech, I have always held that words only have power if we lend them importance. But bear with me for a moment.

It doesn't just matter if a person for whom you hold no warm feelings insults you. What if people whose opinions DO matter to you hear that person's words? I was always taught that "silence lends assent". If you were to say: "Michael eats shit sandwiches", I may mark you as a person for whom I have no regard but what of people that I might count as important that might sway in their opinion of me because of what you said? If I don't "defend" myself, they might assume that I have no problem with your statement.

The next thing you know, a whole group of people are defecating on pieces of bread, every time I'm in the area.



Peace and comfort,



Michael


_____________________________

A Stone in My Shoe

Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me?

"For that which I love, I will do horrible things"

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 12
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:07:39 AM   
Rule


Posts: 10479
Joined: 12/5/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: LaTigresse
people making the accusation based upon their own behaviors being projected ... And it's a normal human thing to assume others are like us.

I am rather unemotional, though a bit of emotion has returned to me these past years.

Indeed, people often project their own perception of reality onto other people. Often erroneous(ly). Disregarding alcohol and drugs abuse, it is the cause of just about 80-98 per cent of (violent) conflicts, I suspect.

There are (or have been) a number of people here whose posts I enjoy(ed) and some whom I would like to meet.

< Message edited by Rule -- 12/9/2011 8:08:22 AM >

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 13
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:09:01 AM   
ChatteParfaitt


Posts: 6562
Joined: 3/22/2011
From: The t'aint of the Midwest -- Indiana
Status: offline
First, Welcome to the discussion side of CM, DaddySatyr !!

Most excellent post. I agree with what you have said in terms of the very act of forming an opinion means you have some level of emotion about a topic.

I'm an emotional, intuitive person with some pretty heavy empathic vibes going on at times. So I "feel" people, and yes, that even works online. To date, I have never met anyone from online who wasn't exactly what I thought they'd be, so this weird psychic radar seems to work.

So I could never say my interactions in this forum lack emotion; quite the contrary. However, b/c I am an emotional, empathic person I have trained myself to be very picky about where I want to involve my emotions.  And when it comes to online only interactions, I mostly don't.

People I meet in real life and consider my friend, now that is very different.

One thing I see on the boards is an amazing amount of pent up anger. I know a person can get caught up in a pissing match (for awhile), I certainly have. But once you realize you're just talking at each other and not communicating, I don't get why people don't stop.

This is a forum open to millions of people world wide. Not everyone is going to agree with me, or you, or whoever is reading this post right now. B/c people don't always agree, and no one is always right. The whole "I have to be right" thingie is sooooo  toddler stage to me. Especially as it is almost always followed by the toddler like tantrum.

Although I admit taking a perverse delight in some of the trainwreck threads, the childish anger turns me off.


_____________________________



(in reply to DaddySatyr)
Profile   Post #: 14
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:10:56 AM   
Rule


Posts: 10479
Joined: 12/5/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr
in civilized debate, personal attacks have no place. They don't move the discussion forward and they're just beneath people who are supposed to be loving, sentient, beings.

You have an idealistic perception of reality and human beings.

(in reply to DaddySatyr)
Profile   Post #: 15
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:12:01 AM   
stellauk


Posts: 1360
Status: offline
I actually understand it completely.

It doesn't matter whether it's online, offline, face to face, lying next to each other in a bed, or coming at you from a television screen words and gestures are still communication, it's still people relating to one another, the connections are still relationships, and the words and what they imply still convey and arouse genuine emotions.

The vehicle for all this is projection. We all project, constantly, or if you choose to call it by something else 'vibes'. We all give off vibes, and we all pick up on them.

We all play roles, we develop personas, and through this we mask and enhance different aspects of our characters and personalities just as skilfully as any actor.

Some come here to post and interact with others, and some don't. They come, they read, they observe. You might not know much or even anything about a person, or have even had contact with them.

But that what you read here in their words can tell you so much about them, their general attitude to life and people, their issues or lack of them, their insight, and even in some cases how they are feeling on that particular day or what sort of day they are having.

Similarly, when posting, it's not only what you say which draws people's attention, but what you don't say. Coming here is no different from an actor standing in front of a camera or appearing on stage. They present a character, project and deliver their lines just the same. And different people who read the posts, like different people in the audience, notice different things and pick up on the projection.

However that what you pick up from soneone's words... is it the truth? How do you know? Do you understand the reasoning and motivation behind it? Or is it just your assumptions? A measured guess?

Where is the truth? Where does the truth lie? Actually there's no such thing as 'the absolute truth'. Academics argue over what is an acceptable universal definition of The Truth.

Generally speaking, there's more that one. There's five in fact. The truth you tell yourself about yourself. The truth you tell yourself about someone else. The truth someone else tells you about you. The truth you tell someone else about them. And the truth you tell everybody about everything.

The common factor here is of course, it's all relative. It's all relative to your own individual awareness, your own individual understanding of people and life, and your individual perception.

And isn't this what really lies at the heart of the matter? Isn't that why many of us, if not all, come here? We come here to increase or develop that awareness, that perception, that knowledge, both of ourselves and of other people.

How seriously we take things here I find is relative to how much the interactions here impact on our lives and how much we allow them to. We all have our own individual reasons for coming here, our own circumstances. Some manage to squeeze in half an hour or so in a busy life, while for others at that particular time all they have for company is a screen, a keyboard and a mouse.

Words have an effect, they can sting, they can soothe, they can inspire, and some can damage your feelings of self-esteem and self-worth if you allow them to.

The same words carry the same power to convey pain or happiness irrespective of whether they are here or expressed between people face to face.

They all come from the minds and hearts of people who are very real.

Edited to add: This is my opinion and observation, and what was going through my mind when I responded to the topic. Therefore please don't regard this as being any sort of specialist knowledge or any claim that I am an authority on the subject. I'm not.

< Message edited by stellauk -- 12/9/2011 8:18:34 AM >


_____________________________

Usually when you have all the answers for something nobody is interested in listening.

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 16
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:14:48 AM   
DaddySatyr


Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011
From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Rule
You have an idealistic perception of reality and human beings.


Thank the Great Creator!



Peace and comfort,



Michael


_____________________________

A Stone in My Shoe

Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me?

"For that which I love, I will do horrible things"

(in reply to Rule)
Profile   Post #: 17
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:20:38 AM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr


quote:

ORIGINAL: LaTigresse

I understand what you are saying because I would be lying if I said that I do not share a desire to be seen as a person of integrity and honour. I think for me.......while it does matter to a small degree......if I do not see the person looking back at me as having a degree of the same, then their opinion of me matter so much less.

I do not care if a skunk thinks I smell good. It is a skunk. What does it know?



I agree with that, for the most part. As a writer and a strong advocate for free speech, I have always held that words only have power if we lend them importance. But bear with me for a moment.

It doesn't just matter if a person for whom you hold no warm feelings insults you. What if people whose opinions DO matter to you hear that person's words? I was always taught that "silence lends assent". If you were to say: "Michael eats shit sandwiches", I may mark you as a person for whom I have no regard but what of people that I might count as important that might sway in their opinion of me because of what you said? If I don't "defend" myself, they might assume that I have no problem with your statement.

The next thing you know, a whole group of people are defecating on pieces of bread, every time I'm in the area.

Peace and comfort,

Michael



I do understand this also, but again, only to a point. And again, I think it is perhaps my own way of viewing others colouring my assumptions of others also.

I expect people to be human, in that I know we are all faulty creatures. What is an acceptable fault in a person, as in whether or not I will like them, respect them, want them in my life.......is very probably going to be quite different than it will for someone else.

I know for a fact, that someone I love and respect very much, holds in rather high regard, some people I do not. He has different measures of what he feels is worthy of respect and not. And likewise the reverse.

There are also people I care deeply about who hold in regard people I only have contempt for.

That being said.........I do my level best to avoid forming opinions about people, until I've actually spent time with them to apply my own measures rather than the word of a person that very probably has different measures.....to whatever degree. Certainly I listen to others opinions, but prefer to see for myself and determine. Because this is MY way, I make the human assumption that others do similarly. Sometimes it works, other times it doesn't. When it doesn't, that to ME, is a personality fault.......therefore someone who's opinions matter less because of it.


_____________________________

My twisted, self deprecating, sense of humour, finds alot to laugh about, in your lack of one!

Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!

(in reply to DaddySatyr)
Profile   Post #: 18
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:24:45 AM   
DaddySatyr


Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011
From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky
Status: offline
I try to focus on the good in people - give them the benefit of the doubt, if you will - unless or until that individual proves themselves unworthy of that doubt.

I understand that we are coming at this from tWo polarized perspectives but that's why there's eight horses in a race.



Peace and comfort,



Michael


< Message edited by DaddySatyr -- 12/9/2011 8:25:35 AM >


_____________________________

A Stone in My Shoe

Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me?

"For that which I love, I will do horrible things"

(in reply to LaTigresse)
Profile   Post #: 19
RE: How does emotion figure into your on-line interacti... - 12/9/2011 8:27:12 AM   
VirginPotty


Posts: 11624
Joined: 7/16/2008
From: Virginville
Status: offline
quote:

So I "feel" people, and yes, that even works online. To date, I have never met anyone from online who wasn't exactly what I thought they'd be, so this weird psychic radar seems to work.


Another thing, LaT alot of the posters aren't just random names on a computer screen. 
I"ve met a minimum of 40 people from this site so yes it can get personal.  Even for those regular posters that haven't met anyone yet (I do stress regular) you can develop an online relationship with posters that you banter back & forth with...(remember how Holly aka sirsholly & I used to go at each other all in the name of fun) and that can make it personal too. 
Holly & I never met face to face but the online friendship was definitely there. Posters will chat on the phone, chat on the other side, chat on IM so it is personal even if you've never met them in person.

_____________________________

Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.

(in reply to ChatteParfaitt)
Profile   Post #: 20
Page:   [1] 2 3 4 5   next >   >>
All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid >> How does emotion figure into your on-line interactions? Page: [1] 2 3 4 5   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.109