The Big Idea.

Obviously, Twitter isn't as popular in Jeddah as it is elsewhere, like say in the US or the UK. Here is where we can see a very good example of how we over-react to almost anything.
When someone from here is linked to the Twitter website, or hears about it, they suddenly have this look of disgust, and I'm sometimes afraid they might actually gag in front of me when they incredulously yell (at me, of course),
"What the hell is it supposed to do? What purpose does it serve? Why do people waste their time on something as stupid as that? I mean, who THE HELL (gagging starts here) would actually DO THAT?"
You'd think I mentioned something about gutting Taif baboons and feeding their red butts to the wild cats that roam the streets of our neighborhood.
I can't judge. After all, I had the same reaction. I mean, seriously.
But I find that with Twitter, I am forced to be more creative about what I'm thinking about, what I'm doing, what I'm seeing, who I'm talking to, and what I'd like to do.
It's not so much an announcement to people I know, like Facebook status updates, as it is a creative writing exercise.
A short story in 140 characters or less.
So I try to stay away from the whole
Just saying.
I'm not quite sure what your over reaction is about .. but I strongly agree that a lot of us over react over a lot of things that wasn't worth that much of a dramatic reaction.
ReplyDeleteSuzann:
ReplyDeleteI over-react about everything, actually. I'm surprised you haven't noticed. :P
I interpret every little thing that is said to me, and that is probably what sustains this blog, too.