My wife thinks this is just one of those things many people feel, but most people know better than to say in public. She was mortified I’d posted it here, but relieved I didn’t do it on Facebook.
So I guess I learned a valuable lesson. One that I am sure I’ll have to learn again several times.
I’d like Jodi to link back to the part where I insisted everyone else must share my POV, or where I said anyone was less entitled to their opinion. It’s quite evident the opinion that is socially unacceptable is my own. I’m the one who’s been chastened, called names, and had all kind of conjecture about my mental and emotional health expressed.
Today of all days is a day to pause and reflect and remember. If someone brought up the OMG Where Were You When the Towers Fell on October 17, for instance, it would be a bit out of sync. But I can’t write 9/11 without getting a little twist of a flashback. That date will never be normal again. We all have dates of meaning to us, birthdays, anniversaries. Then there are historical dates, July 4, December 7. I don’t think it’s out of the norm to reflect on the significance of those days when they roll around.
Cheer up, cricetus…by tomorrow everyone will be back to their old selves.
I think I’ll be able to sleep at night knowing that you have found at least one, and possibly more, of my posts to be “not fascinating.” Further, your statement should read, “These stories are never interesting…to me,” because like I said before, I like reading them and I find them interesting. So you don’t. Fine. Who cares? Like you said, there’s no controversy here. Avoid talk radio on 9/11, turn off the TV if they show a memorial event, and don’t open threads that have 9/11 in the title. This should take about 30 total seconds of effort or less. Problem solved.
I assume that I have probably not fascinated people lots of times. I have probably even bored them to tatters. That doesn’t make me a bad person, but I do generally try not to be tedious company. :insert inevitable joke here about how I’m being tedious now:
The truth is, most of us are incredibly boring and will never live through the kind of experiences that newspaper headlines are made of. There’s a good chance that what few memorable and life-changing moments we have in our lives will be awfully boring to everyone but ourselves and possibly a handful of close friends and family.
Then again, the world would be an awfully quiet place if all we were ever allowed to talk about was that one momentous event in our life that everyone is guaranteed to find utterly fascinating, don’t you think? Even then, someone would probably still manage to complain about how boring and mundane that was in comparison to someone else’s story about that same event… because no one’s interesting to everyone all the time.
(Also, in that alternate universe where no one is allowed to talk about anything that could potentially be boring, Twitter and Facebook and Livejournal would all cease to exist in a simultaneous implosion of empathy… as would the cell phone bills of a billion teenage girls)
Human beings are inherently self-centered. As is this OP, for that matter.
I didn’t say people who talk about what they were doing on 9/11 are attention whores. I said they’re talking about themselves, and that most people love to do so. It’s not so much “look at me” as “here is what I was doing/thought”. When given a chance, people will always talk about where they were/what they were doing, because then they get to place themselves at the centre of the narrative.
It’s not necessarily a bad thing, just a human thing. It doesn’t mean any one person’s account is any more valid or not that anyone else’s. It just means we love to talk about ourselves.
And I would disagree with you that thousands of other people’s accounts are just as important as your own. Unless you’re talking about the others who were there alongside you, I’d say that the account of those who weren’t directly involved are not as important as the ones who were. They can be interesting, sure, sometimes, but they’re not as historically important as yours and those others who were there.
Don’t worry, it took me ages to work out there are certain subjects on this Board that you may not A) Be honest about or B) Have a dissenting opinion on.
This is just silly. If you espouse an opinion and a majority happens to disagree, all it means is that most of those people disagree with you. No need to be a martyr about it.