Litiquette V

Enjoying your Literotica porn? Which are you more willing to do?

  • Enjoy whatever is posted

    Votes: 193 60.9%
  • Try to find the most erotic images you can find and share them

    Votes: 34 10.7%
  • Post porn as a way to entice more PMs

    Votes: 10 3.2%
  • Post porn as shock value

    Votes: 2 0.6%
  • Use the porn you see here to masturbate to

    Votes: 78 24.6%

  • Total voters
    317
Status
Not open for further replies.
We seem to lost our sense of urgency. Meandering around, going hither and fro......

Decide to do one extra thing today.....and then of course, tell us about it!
 
Mine was simple enough - I usually have a morning rhythm (breakfast, run, shower, work), but today, since the weather was so nice, I broke that rhythm and went through part of my closet to pull out some dress clothes for donation. It curved the day and now I feel a bit different as I go into the day.
 
We seem to lost our sense of urgency. Meandering around, going hither and fro......

Decide to do one extra thing today.....and then of course, tell us about it!

I updated my profile. That's about as extra as I'm going to get today.

Well unless you count the cupcakes. Which I suppose, one should always give notice to the cupcakes.
 
Pmann's self congratulatory (not judging) post got me thinking: What is the virtue in sharing accomplishments. Are the accomplishments not satisfying in and of themselves or is external validation required to help perpetuate that feeling of accomplishment?
 
I once made a bet with a friend that I could write something that would bait Mr. Savage into putting my letter in his column. I made it first time. His response to me is even part of the Wikipedia page on "facials".

*takes a bow*

I bet I could write him a f'reals letter that he'd include in his column. No baiting required. :cool:

*wonders if Pmann is baiting me into looking up facials on Wikipedia

Pmann's self congratulatory (not judging) post got me thinking: What is the virtue in sharing accomplishments. Are the accomplishments not satisfying in and of themselves or is external validation required to help perpetuate that feeling of accomplishment?

I think as I continue to grow spiritually, external validation becomes less and less important. But I also think, as humans, we are generally social~tribal creatures and so some modicum of *look what I did!* is normal... as is feeling warm fuzzies from pats on the back. :heart:
 
Pmann's self congratulatory (not judging) post got me thinking: What is the virtue in sharing accomplishments. Are the accomplishments not satisfying in and of themselves or is external validation required to help perpetuate that feeling of accomplishment?

Sometimes accomplishments go unseen and people want to hear them. For most things, it doesn't matter much to me personally. There are some people you want to validate you. I mean, getting mentioned on the Facial section of Wiki? That's pretty damned impressive.

I bet I could write him a f'reals letter that he'd include in his column. No baiting required. :cool:

*wonders if Pmann is baiting me into looking up facials on Wikipedia

Well, that sounds like a challenge for you. Let's see you get a letter in there!
 
Pmann's self congratulatory (not judging) post got me thinking: What is the virtue in sharing accomplishments. Are the accomplishments not satisfying in and of themselves or is external validation required to help perpetuate that feeling of accomplishment?

I think it is important in life to surround yourself with mindless sycophants. LOL - just kidding, but that was the first thing that popped into my mind.

I share my accomplishments for three different reasons.

First, at work, I share them so I stay in the senior partners minds so I can get first pick of the juicy (interesting and lucrative) clients, and those accomplishments are part of the overall marketing and sales approach - e.g. "this is the guy who overthrew the government of Paraquay with a two shrimp forks and a mimeo machine". There is a whole submarket for white papers explaining how things were done, etc.

Second, among my friends, we share accomplishments as a way of reinforcing and encouraging each other - if I can do it, you can do it sort of thing and as a way of soliciting critiques and feedback. (Damn, that sounds Type A - and it is.)

Finally, accomplishments are shared as illustrative stories in casual conversation.

I think it all comes back to living in a social world where shared experiences, accomplishments, failures, etc. provide fodder for the necessary interactions to build strong and functional social networks.

I guess there is a fourth reason to - flat out bragging in terms of "damn, look what I did, I fucking rock!"
 
When I was younger, I put off accolades and commendations, because I thought them unimportant. Important people will remember who did great things, and unimportant people will believe what they will.

In my latter years, I have found, important people, gather around them unclaimed accomplishments by other people; to make themselves seem greater. Often forgetting those who helped them attain their stature.

In an honest world, people who do great things shouldn't need to toot their own horn. The truth is, it is not such an honest world.
 
Well scratch what I said up there. I spent all day painting the girls' room and then shopped for Easter and cleaned and did laundry... BF came home and didn't properly appreciate my efforts, imho.

Ergo, I'm pissy.

The attention whore is alive and well.
 
Well scratch what I said up there. I spent all day painting the girls' room and then shopped for Easter and cleaned and did laundry... BF came home and didn't properly appreciate my efforts, imho.

Ergo, I'm pissy.

The attention whore is alive and well.

Damn BF. I'll help you plot sweet sweet revenge on him. ;)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top