The only people I meet like that tend to be online students Tony. We use Skype video conferencing for a few sessions, so have actually seen each other. I'm quieter than people imagine, though none have yet said 'uglier'. I'm very prone to catch whatever bugs go around university environments too, so rather like electronic distance. With colleagues, the situation is we know a lot more about each other than most in online encounters.
-- My version has 'confusion' written through it. I say something, Gabby takes it another way, or knows what I intended and chooses another slant for whatever reason. Online, I assume she has a sense of humour and a good turn with words. Deception is not part of this in the first place. Just guesses with less risk than so called reality. I suppose the classic online deceiver is the groomer - where the intent is to set up and image and then meet the victim.
On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 7:54:18 PM UTC, facilitator wrote:
On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 7:54:18 PM UTC, facilitator wrote:
On Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 2:11:33 PM UTC-5, archytas wrote:The delusion that we are what we project is interesting Tony."We claim to be what we project". Your version allows for reality mine allows for dishonesty. I think most people want to project a filtered image of themselves enough so that if we ever meet people who we've only conversed with online we become slightly astonished how different they appear and act in "real life".
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