In middle school, I used to blog almost every day. I wish I blogged more. Because I forget so easily. One of my favorite things to do is to read what I once wrote just to laugh at my old self. I used to be pretty hilarious, but maybe only to me.
I like reading blogs in general. You can learn so much about somebody’s personality just from a blog. It’s such a crisis. It’s insane how many blogs I go through. I used to justify it by attributing open-mindedness and appreciation to its benefits. I still do. Recently, I’ve been discovering some cons to this whole issue.
1. It is time consuming. Pretty straightforward.
2. It is emotionally attaching. It seems like one is not only attached to the content of the blog but the writer of the blog. It becomes even more dangerous if it is a one-way attachment. There then develops an imbalance of feelings, which can have negative effects.
3. It is addicting. Some people, honestly, are really good bloggers. Or they’re just good at discovering the hip videos or the hip articles. It is a cycle that doesn’t seem to end. And because it is much easier to subscribe to a blog than to unsubscribe from a blog, emotionally, blogs are like black holes.
But though I recognize these deficiencies, I am unable to dethrone my desire to read blogs. I do love reading about what people think about and what people are up to in their daily lives. Much like any desire, it’s uncontrollable. It simply is. It’s out of my hands to manage.
I don’t even think it’s possible to choose to fall in love.
– Larry
function definition = crisis
%This is a new phrase that I’m trying to coin.
%This definition is still being determined.
definition = {‘1’, ‘a time-consuming activity’, ‘2’, ‘a radical idea or thought or action’};