The notion of acceptable topics on twitter suggests there are unacceptable topics?
Since it is the internet, you’ll find more than enough of both.
You can find the funniest post you’ll see all day, and the saddest.
But maybe we can skip the rampant bullshit?
The funniest thing I’ve seen today is a hipster in a bathroom hanging onto a shower curtain rod with the caption:
“A friend gave me an edible so I’m taking the train instead of driving.”
He’s wearing shades, got ear plugs in listening to his phone.
Looks more like an acid trip, but whatever. Edibles don’t go that hard.
It’s funny in the same way drunk fourteen year olds were funny until they found out they were drinking orange juice, not orange juice and vodka. (That canned orange juice was horrible.)
A guy hanging on a shower rod takes me back to my subway days in Philadelphia and New York.
In Philly I took the Broad Street Line from Market St. to Oregon Ave.
Being from Oregon, I mentioned the coincidence a few times.
The New York subway was like a ride on It’s A Small World in Disneyland.
Sing along to the classic anthem of world peace during a delightful musical boat tour. Cruise along the Seven Seaways Waterway on a gentle 10-minute journey through all 7 continents.
Pass through vivid, fantastical scenes representing the iconic sights and sounds of dozens of nations.
Behold a cast of dancing darlings from nearly every corner of the globe and watch as the Audio-Animatronics figures achieve universal harmony as they sing one song in many languages.
The subway ride on a 1979 Saturday night from Brooklyn to Queens showed the usual disco kings along with a groups of Puerto Rican couples dressed for the dance floor, groups of black folks heading up town, groups of Chinese people heading for Chinatown.
No one was singing, but it would have been nice.
The Sad Twitter Scroll
Part of aging is keeping up to date on social media.
Sure, go ahead and tell everyone you’re not online, not plugged in, have no time for such nonsense.
Go ahead. It’s not unusual, but there is a consequence for leaving the world wide web out of your life.
Some people make online connections to others and they’re the most important part of their lives and they never meet.
This isn’t for you.
Instead, I’m thinking of the people who help others who need a boost, a shot in the arm, a pep talk.
There is a genuine feeling of happiness when you read some posts, and a genuine feeling of dread with others.
The most dreadful are the moments of random violence with fists, guns, and automobiles.
I don’t need to see people maimed to believe there are people who get maimed and those who do the maiming.
It feels like gratuitous bullshit to dull feelings into accepting that that’s how life is.
Showing daily violent acts are not acceptable topics.