Saturday, February 1, 2014

Get Off the Line

  1. Do important people in your life discuss the dangers of certain online behavior.
Honestly, no, no one has ever really talked about it with me. I mean my mum always says tells me to be wary of the pictures that I upload to Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. But what mum doesn't want to warn their daughters so that they don't look like hoes on the internet? That's really where "online behaviors" stops for me I suppose.
  1. Do young people fully understand the consequences of online activity, why or why not?
I don't think they do. They probably have an idea of these said "consequences" but I hope and pray that they don't know instead of just ignoring it because there are way too many hoe pictures on just about everything. We all know the THOT pose: the girl's all bent over, showing her butt, with a tongue out, her hands all crooked making her peace sign look like a retarded "K," and gives an all around THOT vibe. I mean don't get me wrong, I love me some chicks (like, really, I'm a whole lesbian though) and I have no problem with cute girls or their pictures, it's all these titty shots that I can't take; I mean hey if you look good then you look good but don't go and flaunt your body like that. It won't be that long when you flaunt your body so much that the boy(s) or girl(s) you were trying to impress gets bored and moves over to the next THOT. Even dudes do it, I swear I can't scroll down with out at least three shirtless dudes just sitting there for no reason.


PS: If you watched the "Internship," hopefully you got my reference in the title... if not, you should see it, it's hilariously awesome (and Stiles is in it, whoa, who said that?! *looks around* because it wasn't me... *looks around again*).

Nerdy At Heart and College Bound By Mind

So... what am I doing? Just being me, my nerdy self, at school. Yes, on a Saturday. Although, technically it's not school, just an educational program about school work and helping you get to college. But... yeah, it's basically school. The sad thing? I still have fun, nerdy at heart and college bound by mind. That's me and my moto, so obviously this works for me. The people here are pretty cool, and the atmosphere is chill--it only gets real when the director for the program starts talking about how few minorities actually go and stay in college. But it's all in the process for helping us, and it does.