on โ04-05-2014 07:58 PM
on โ04-05-2014 08:01 PM
No. It's often the poster that is the problem.
on โ04-05-2014 08:01 PM
Yep
on โ04-05-2014 08:06 PM
im sure if i think hard enough i'll find a problem with that
on โ04-05-2014 08:14 PM
That reply highlights the topic title ๐
on โ04-05-2014 08:58 PM
on โ04-05-2014 10:17 PM
In time you may gain the ability it understand. "Rome was not built in a day" ๐
on โ05-05-2014 01:14 PM
I agree on some levels with the OP - I have a 'different' sense of humour, tend to shoot from the hip with a witty (sometimes dry reply) but not always understood without emoticons.
But, there are some Posters who post to cause trouble, few and far between and usually easily recognisable and just as easily despatched given their own less than 'polite' posts.
All in all, I don't think there is much narkiness on the boards any more.
BTW - this is an opinion and in no way reflects on any posters who have replied here to date. LOL
on โ05-05-2014 01:35 PM
@2106greencat wrote:I agree on some levels with the OP - I have a 'different' sense of humour, tend to shoot from the hip with a witty (sometimes dry reply) but not always understood without emoticons.
But, there are some Posters who post to cause trouble, few and far between and usually easily recognisable and just as easily despatched given their own less than 'polite' posts.
All in all, I don't think there is much narkiness on the boards any more.
BTW - this is an opinion and in no way reflects on any posters who have replied here to date. LOL
I may have misinterpreted that post - where's the emoticons?
on โ05-05-2014 02:07 PM
Posters are not the problem, it's how their posts are interpreted, that is a problem.
One of the best bits of advice I was ever given as a writer came from my first publisher, Walter McVitty. He told me: "Always remember, when someone sits down to read something you have written, you are not going to be there, looking over their shoulder, to explain what you meant to say. So no matter how beautiful, clever or funny a piece of writing may be, if it does not convey to the reader the meaning you intended it to convey, then it hasn't worked and needs to be rewritten.