The key to the person behind the keyboard. Is the Internet,that bastion of
anonymity, just a cesspool of typists on new personas and putting on airs?
Self-conscious bloggers, for example, tend to be negative, focus on achievement,
and use the word "size" the latter often related to clothes.
The capacity for evils is, for most people, the easiest to hide.
In our culture, rage is so stigmatic and demonized that we conceal it fairly successfully. We try to be too nice or too nice or too good. Normal anger
can fester and turn into toxic resentment, embitterment, hostility, or
explosive violence.
Neurotic bloggers tend to use tons of first-person pronouns, fixate on their feelings, employ modifiers such as "awful" and "terribly" and sprinkle the word "stress" throughout their prose.
"HELP"!!! I have horrible, awful, no good, very bad PMS -Typical Julia Allison.
Gregarious people commonly employ terms indicative of a vibrant social life "friends", "girls", "tickets" and "drinks" among them.
"I have been friends with Brenner for 30 years- I can't swear that she danced at my wedding, but she definitely attended it" -Typical Arianna Huffington.
Self- disciplined bloggers are also less likely to take angry or tentative tones.
They have a task-oriented mentality and use words such as "practical", "ready" and "completed"
"So you have a practical, targeted measure that seems to have helped abate a deeper recession in the auto industry" Typical Andrew Sullivan.
Liberal bloggers use longer words such as "complicated", "particularly" and "literature"
"One of the things I find puzzling about the whole oil market discussion is how complicated people seem to make it" Typical Paul Krugman
Today's Wisdom:
"The two hardest things to handle in life are failure and success"
Love Always Anna Anka
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