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On the other hand my posts might come across as more of one of those long, boring, and old book things they might have heard of. However, blogs and what not still might be too much of a direct approach for many of today’s (at least in the western world) rather pacified masses. Social media seems to have encouraged people to communicate via incomplete and grammatically poor sentences, if they don’t use an emoji instead. If anything, the new spin is the hard route, so stop it already! The real /old school process isn’t as hard as these people are making it and/or perceive it to be. When they do reply to my initial contact, their initial reply is often very vague, like “sounds cool”- thereby info that would answer questions such as “Do you have any other ways you want to try this?”, “Are you coming in the first place?”, and so on is never provided. That might be why it can take a week or more for some people (friends, relatives, work/school project members) to reply sometimes, although I’d imagine they did get my initial message, as they call, text, email, or post about something else to me in the time between my initial contact and their reply to it. Social media has also apparently destroyed people’s communication capabilities, where it seems if something can’t be expressed in an abbreviation like LOL or an emoji, then it apparently can’t be expressed at all. I only get on once a day, and despite having a decent number of friends and family as contacts on there, I can be off in 30 minutes or less sometimes, as they either don’t have anything new, or posted something like a cat trick video or said they wanted to eat a hamburger today. I can get multiple messages a day from Facebook when I check my email the next day, sometimes on the same thing, saying you have a message or someone posted this. Not using it is advised, but I only use it to keep in touch with some more distant relatives, geographically and biologically speaking, and don’t post or type anything that should ID me in any way, just small talk, so I should be (hopefully) okay to get on. At the same time, don’t live on it to the extent that you don’t have a real life, nor do you need to share every detail of your life either. Your friends and relatives likely want to know what’s going on with your life, but the rest of the human race likely doesn’t, so for starters, don’t make your account public. More so, they don’t seem to care or understand that they do.Ī big chunk of interaction now a days occurs via social media. Not wanting to potentially look foolish or something along those lines is understandable, but it seems that no matter the format or setting of communication nowadays, many people fail at it, and they fail miserably. Public speaking is supposed to be the number one fear people possess.