XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, can.politics, alt.politics.liberalism
XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.politics.usa.republican
On Tue, 12 Sep 2023 21:21:49 -0400, Governor Swill says...
Siri's idea of substantive replies:
"I can feel your luv."
"I, myself, don't have close acquaintances with imaginary persons."
"You are an obsessive little freak."
"Phil who?"
"You."
"Thanks for giving me laugh in a dour week."
"Are you saying gays never have children?"
One liner replies.
Soooo substantive.
I win.
Nailed it!
He sure did.
I win.
LOL... nerds, and ONLY nerds think they have to win. Such low-self-esteem.
OK... you win. Nerd.
https://i.imgur.com/g9UfSG4.mp4
If it makes you feel better about your crummy life.
https://i.imgur.com/gUcGwoi.jpg
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Common Disguises of People with Low Self-Esteem
Low self-esteem's first "disguise" is pretending to be valid and true.
Low self-esteem is a painful belief system; sufferers create habits, even entire lifestyles, based on managing those beliefs and that pain.
Studies show that people with low self-esteem establish behaviors that protect themselves from the failure and rejection they fear and expect.
1. Isolation: I bet 90% of the low self-esteemed nerds here live ONLY with mommy.
2. Over-achievement: Ahhh... the "I'll win if I finish my math assignment first!" quest.
3. Perfectionism: Rudy's a stickler for grammar and spelling being correct, but fucks up more than anyone, taking us back to #2.
4. Boredom: Low self-esteem Usenet nerds have NOTHING going on in their lives, 'cept sitting at home, waiting to do mommy's bidding, so they get on Usenet and rage.
5. Meanness: That snippy, snarky, wicked critic, castigator, or complainer might employ the same reflexes as a wounded creature: scratch, sting, bite; attack to overcompensate for real or perceived weakness.
These disguises aim to manage pain. This is self-hatred's driving force: a suffering that feels eternal, yet deserved. Its captives lurch through life trying to dodge or soothe it while involuntarily creating more.
(hence the all-day outings on Usenet)
And these disguises can lead to misdiagnoses. They are not causes; they are effects. How often, seeing just such symptoms and not searching further, do we mistreat others?
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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