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you ever felt something missing?
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ff babe
have u ever felt something not wright or felt something was missing, maybe felt u have forgot something before u no what it is, if so, what was it, tell me lots of stories :D
Halcyon+On+On
I felt YOU were missing...but you just showed up again one day...:p
itsTrueSonic
everyone feel that way .. i guess so.. i feel this way all the time. everyone feels insecure during their life. i always feel like i forgot to lock the front door every morning i leave for work or school. one week i plastered the front door knob with paste, and when i lock the door, i touch the door knob, and when i am driving, i see my hand is sticky. that way i know i locked the door.

do you have insecure tendencies that people talk about you behind your back? i used to have a problem with that, but now, i say f*ck it.. if people don't like you, they don't like you. you have to face the fact that the world is not perfect to your own degree. that's just my opinion.

p.s. please don't make a mark on your list that i talked to a 13 year old. i do not want to be labeled as a pedophile. i want a clean record. i want to succeed in life. i don't want my name next to michael jackson. please. :wtf: :wtf:
D-res
AHHH

teh pedofile returns


*runs*
Renegade
God these gimmick accounts get old fast. Everything you've posted indicates that you are an older person trying to imitate the intelligence and demeanour of a 13 year old girl. For instance:

quote:
wright


If a 13 year old girl was going to mispell "right" then it wouldn't be with a "w" at the front. That's counter-intuitive. The use "wr" prefix is fairly esoteric and it would be unlikely that if one were in doubt about how to spell "right" that they would get the "gh" part correct (which is, in itself, has a counter-intuitive pronunciation that would require a certain degree of knowledge to get right), but then over-complicate the beginning of the word by by adding an unnecessary "w". This is the hallmark of someone familiar with the intricacies of the English language trying to look stupid. If anything, however, it reveals an intimacy with the language far exceeding that of the average 13 year old girl.

From previous posts:

quote:
well as u all no i haven't been here that long and my other threads were trashed, i just like to say that i might be leaving unless u can give me any kind of reason to stay, what can i do now and should i just leave before things get worse, i really don't no :(!
This was the only site that i thought i could get on well with people, but obviusly not, have any of u got any ideas for me that i could do if i do stay?
I don't want to leave... :(:(:(


Note here that, aside from the run on sentences, the syntax of the post is virtually perfect (including the use of apostrophes in contractions). Note the correct spelling of non-phoenetic words such as "people" and "threads" (in fact, no other spelling mistakes are there at all) but incorrect spelling of the similarly non-phoenetic "know". Why would she not understand the phoenetics of this word but still be able to spell words that are even less evidently non-phoenetic? The answer, I suspect, is because the person behind the posts realised that the spelling of 13 year old girls is less than perfect and so the easiest way to convey this is by making basic errors, common to many younger people (i.e. the no / know distinction). However, the accurate syntax of in the post (disguised with the use of run-on sentences, with commas in place of full-stops) and otherwise impeccible spelling tells me that this mispelling was a deliberate attempt by an older individual - familiar with the subtleties of the english language - to appear less mature in the post.

To continue:

quote:
no, i'm not a 40+ yr old man, i don't no what a fed is because u probably live in america and i live in the uk, i'm only 13(and i am really 13 in really life, i didn't make it up!)
u guys suck, i thought i was coming to a thread with nice people, well it shows how wrong i am! :(


Once again, accurate syntax and innovative use of parantheses. She shows an awareness of cultural relativity beyond her years (how was she to know intuitively that the term "fed" was an exclusively American term?) and her protestations seem fairly meek and non-committal. I mean, if you were a thirteen year old girl on a forum full of people twice your age, why would you keep on coming back after already having been dismissed? If you're going to come back and face it all again, why wouldn't you do so with more conviction?

Furthermore, how is a 13 year old girl familiar enough with trance music to find this site and how is she familiar enough with forum terminology to know what a "thread" is, let alone use it intuitively and correctly in a forum discussion?

quote:
well fine, i guess i am leaving then, i don't think its fair just because i'm a noob, there's plenty other noobs here, but no, it always has to be me, well i don't have to bother making nice threads and try being perlight to introduce myself if ur gunna treat me like this!
i h8 u people and i h8 this thread, i have only been here like a week, u couldn't even give me a back handed complement, u have to pick on me, iv'e known other people on threads that are nicer than u guys, just gimme a break!
c'ya u stupid bunch of idiots!


Again, ignore the accurate spelling (apart from intentional contractions) and focus on this:

quote:
noob


How many 13 year old girls are familiar with this term, let alone familiar enough with complexities of forum politics to use it accurately in a sentence?

quote:
there's plenty other noobs here, but no, it always has to be me


Apart from the lack of a full-stop on either side, this is a grammatically perfect sentence. The commas on either side of "but no" display a familiarity with punctuation that generally is developed until much later. Also, note the contraction and proper use of the apostrophe. Once again, this sophisticated awareness of the rules of the English language seem to call into question the simple spelling mistakes and punctuation errors (like using commas instead of full-stops - the full-stop is easily the easiest and first part of punctuation we ever learn to use) the litter the rest of "her" posts.

quote:
back handed complement


Too complex a phrase / concept for a 13 year old?

quote:
i h8 u people and i h8 this thread, i have only been here like a week, u couldn't even give me a back handed complement, u have to pick on me, iv'e known other people on threads that are nicer than u guys, just gimme a break!
c'ya u stupid bunch of idiots!


Again with the false indignation. If a 13 year old was genuinely that pissed off, why would they continue to post?

So, yeah. These trends continue throughout here posts: simple spelling and grammatical errors countered by a demonstrable grasp of the complexities of the English language and it's syntax as well as a firm grasp of how to use internet forums with an awareness of their terminologies and politics usually beyond that of a 13 year old girl.

In short it's someone playing funny buggers in case you hadn't already guessed.
Wicked Neo


'she' is history

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