I got the orange one, I see a lot of people with iphones, but none with that cover, mine's going to standout with this on it.
his high school picture in the other thread will explain his attitude I have grown tired of having a cool phone...before the i phones were out i always had the latest addition of the sony walkman phone..i fucking hate that empty 'pit of the stomach' feeling that i would get after losing or forgetting my phone....also keeping the fucker charged..i had a charger in the car...bedroom...kitchen...cottage...now i have a shitty flip phone that i abuse and lend out cause i have no 'feelings' for it
What I'm saying can just as easily be extremely positive. It is you who makes the conscious decision to perceive it as negative, and therefore... you are the negative person here... not me.
ive never had a fancy cool phone. my phone is plain cool tho, because i can drop it 26026 times without it breaking.
You're right ... It can be ... But ... It wasn't ... Then, from the reasoning you are using, you can also see how you can intentionally do or say things others don't like ... Or perhaps you feel the need to justify yourself in this too? HTML:
...and the $60 per month contract that's attached to it? Fuck that. I don't want to have a phone to begin with, but I need one so that my momma don't go insane.
Theoretically, everything that comes out of my mouth will offend someone. iPhone users will find my comment offensive, while non iPhone users will not feel that I'm "insulting" them, and will therefore see the lighthearted humor in it. People attach to much meaning to words such as "faggot", and automatically succumb to its most hineous meaning. I think that one would see the harmless humor of my comments if one actually cared to, but people are too selfish and impatient to read that deep. They automatically think that the comment is negative, or an attack. They actually enjoy getting offended. They like the attention, and they like the feeling it adds to their numb miserable lives. It's the most fascinating and basic childlike impulse to defend oneself in what is percieved as an attack, instead of actually thinking about it. You, as a Buddhist, must know that it is easier to react to something that to simply laugh it away and turn the other cheek. Not taking life seriously requires practice and a whole lot of patience. Reacting to my silly comments, on the other hand, merely elevates the immature and emotionally insecure to the surface, exposing them to not only the world, but themselves as well. Think of me as a therapist.