“
It's not ogre... it's never ogre... shrek is love... shrek is life.
”
”
Shrek is love Shrek is life
“
But if it is true that human minds are themselves to a very great degree the creations of memes, then we cannot sustain the polarity of vision we considered earlier; it cannot be "memes versus us," because earlier infestations of memes have already played a major role in determining who or what we are. The "independent" mind struggling to protect itself from alien and dangerous memes is a myth. There is a persisting tension between the biological imperative of our genes on the one hand and the cultural imperatives of our memes on the other, but we would be foolish to "side with" our genes; that would be to commit the most egregious error of pop sociobiology. Besides, as we have already noted, what makes us special is that we, alone among species, can rise above the imperatives of our genes— thanks to the lifting cranes of our memes.
”
”
Daniel C. Dennett (Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life)
“
Something strange has happened to the idea of privacy in our surreal time. Instead of being cherished, it appears to have become, a valueless quality—actually undesirable. If a thing is not made public, it doesn’t really exist. Your dog, your wedding, your beach, your baby, your dinner, the interesting meme you recently saw—these things need, on a daily basis, to be shared. Where attention has become the thing most hungered for, where the quest for followers and likes is the new gluttony, privacy has become unnecessary, unwanted, even absurd.
”
”
Salman Rushdie (Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder)
“
When your life isn’t interesting, you tend to focus on other people. You seek excitement and attention from hating others and provoking reactions. This is why memes are so popular on the Internet. People want others to laugh at their attempts at mocking someone else. They’ll do it for likes, comments and shares – for instant gratification.
”
”
Vex King (Good Vibes, Good Life: How Self-Love Is the Key to Unlocking Your Greatness)
“
Life online is a whiplash between deep sorrow, unexpected joy, cheap laughs, profound thoughts, and dumb memes.
”
”
Tony Reinke (12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You)
“
The dating scene had turned into my own real-life version of one of those Wish.com memes. I kept placing an order for Jasper Gervais and the universe kept sending me these laughable cheap-ass knockoffs.
”
”
Elsie Silver (Powerless (Chestnut Springs, #3))
“
What you post on Facebook represents you, it can make you look bitter or better, forgiving or frustrated, resentful or rejoicing, choose wisely.
”
”
Rob Liano
“
It is the Lion, not the Deer, that hides in the grass!
तुम शेर हो यक़ीनन ख़ौफ़ खाओगे;
हम हिरण ख़ौफ़ पीछे छोड़ आए हैं
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
We often talk about the world as if it was originally a safe place. Get real!
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
It’s an internet meme,” I said, matter-of-factly. “I’d tell you to Google it, but you’ve only got about five minutes to live and you’re going to spend every one of those fighting for your life.
”
”
Robert J. Crane (Power (The Girl in the Box, #10))
“
If you listen repeatedly to religious speech, after enough repetitions you will actually begin to notice God and His works where there was just chaotic life going on before. What was formerly chance becomes a miracle. What was pain is now karma. What was human nature is now sin. And regardless of whether these religious memes are presented as Truth or as allegorical mythology, you’re conditioned just the same.
”
”
Richard Brodie (Virus of the Mind: The New Science of the Meme)
“
SOME PEOPLE KEEP LIONS, BUT ALL THEY DO IS, RUN A CIRCUS.
कुछ लोग शेर पालते हैं, पर सर्कस चलाते हैं।
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
You cut in line. That’s a tiny robbery. You are stealing time from my life—and that’s also partial murder.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (A Memoir of Memories and Memes)
“
I respect you as so much bigger than my own understanding. And me too. I don't have to be available to be eligible for breath. I don't have to be measurable in a market of memes. I don't have to be visible to be viable on my path. I don't have to be shy to be sacred about my time. There are only two things I have to do, my mom taught me, and I can do them in the company of my choosing. The company of myself, my living, my dead, my folks, my dreams. 1. Stay Black. 2. Breathe.
”
”
Alexis Pauline Gumbs (Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals (Emergent Strategy))
“
They're trying to breed a nation of techno-peasants. Educated just enough to keep things going, but not enough to ask tough questions. They encourage any meme that downplays thoughtful analysis or encourages docility or self indulgence or uniformity. In what other society do people use "smart" and "wise" as insults? We tell people "don't get smart." Those who try, those who really like to learn, we call "nerds." Look at television or the press or the trivia that passes for political debate. When a candidate DOES try to talk about the issues, the newspapers talk about his sex life. Look at Saturday morning cartoon shows. Peasants, whether they're tilling fields or stuffing circuit boards, are easier to manipulate. Don't question; just believe. Turn off your computer and Trust the Force.
Or turn your computer on and treat it like the Oracle of Delphi.
That's right. They've made education superficial and specialized. Science classes for art majors? Forget it! And how many business or engineering students get a really good grounding in the humanities? When did universities become little more than white collar vocational schools?
”
”
Michael Flynn (In the Country of the Blind)
“
The desert is nothing without water. Actually, it's everything without water, because if it had water it would cease to be a desert. Powdered Duck Eggs are the same way. Just add water! Or don't! How you consume them is up to you.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (BearPaw Duck And Meme Farm presents: Two Ducks Brawling Is A Pre-Pillow Fight)
“
We have been conditioned since birth with the belief that satisfaction of these inner needs comes through our interaction with the world. We seek inner fulfillment through what we have or what we do, through the experiences the world provides, and through the ways others behave toward us. This is the meme that governs so much of our thinking and behavior: the meme that says whether or not we are content with life depends on what we have and what we do. Prevalent as this meme may be, it seldom provides any lasting satisfaction. A person may gather a great deal of wealth, but is he really more secure? More than likely, he will soon find new sources of insecurity. Are my investments safe? Will the stock market crash? Can I trust my friends? Should I employ “security” companies to protect my possessions?
”
”
Peter Russell (Waking Up in Time: Finding Inner Peace in Times of Accelerating Change)
“
The only time you learn is when someone thrusts an opportunity at you and you are not sure.
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
the concept of a “meme” which for our purposes is no different from an “idea”. A meme is actually a collection of ideas that have a strategy for replicating themselves.
”
”
Srinath Srinivasa (The Power Law of Information: Life in A Connected World (Response Books))
“
Having a good life doesn’t mean nothing bad happens. It means using sadness and setback as mechanisms for spiritual growth. That’s the highest form of farming.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (A Memoir of Memories and Memes)
Janet Tashjian (My Life as a Meme (The My Life series Book 8))
“
The Life of Pi' timelessly encapsulates an objectively true & real meme that God is Love and seeks out those He calls unto himself."
~R. Alan Woods [2013]
”
”
R. Alan Woods (The Journey Is the Destination: A Book of Quotes With Commentaries)
“
Member when we memed a man into the White House?
”
”
Christine Lagorio-Chafkin (We Are the Nerds: The Birth and Tumultuous Life of Reddit, the Internet's Culture Laboratory)
“
New life, hope, and change aren’t going to magically drop on our doorstep because we wish for it, long for it, pray for it, share memes on Facebook about it.
”
”
Kathy Escobar
“
Whatever the claims of memes to be regarded as replicators in the same sense as genes, the first part of this chapter established that individual organisms are not replicators.
”
”
Richard Dawkins (The Extended Phenotype: The Long Reach of the Gene)
“
There are three bowls: One contains Should, one contains Would, and one contains Could. All three bowls are empty.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (Me and memes and memories)
“
As a human, why would you ever get cocky? You are just a lump of flesh in the shape of a golfer.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (Me and memes and memories)
“
At some point in every young adult's life, it's crucial to have this breakthrough, to finally see your parents as people instead of robots put on this earth to tell you what to do.
”
”
Quinta Brunson (She Memes Well)
“
As a child in poverty you never know that you're poor, the slums are the slums. They're home. They're what is. So I'd never felt poor. But Me-me made us feel rich. She carried smiles with her.
”
”
Mark Lawrence
“
You need skills to be good at homesteading. You need farming, carpentry, and above all, you need to be able to impersonate Elvis. When society collapses, that’s probably what will save your life.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (A Memoir of Memories and Memes)
“
How do you catch Ozarks fog in a net? It’s like fishing for silence. Teach a man to grow quiet, and he'll starve for the rest of his life. That's why I farm ducks, because trees have feelings, too.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (BearPaw Duck And Meme Farm presents: Two Ducks Brawling Is A Pre-Pillow Fight)
“
Stevie splits his time between Branson and Nashville. I think it's smart to divide time by location, rather than AM and PM, because that way you get more distance and are able to extend your life out further.
”
”
Jarod Kintz (A Memoir of Memories and Memes)
“
There’s one of those stupid Facebook memes. The ones with silly phrases, that get tons of “likes.” It goes something like this: “What makes you miserable in life is the mental image you have of how things should happen.
”
”
Alberto Madrigal (Un lavoro vero)
“
The long run is just a collection of short runs you have to put up with. Saying you have a ten year time horizon doesn't exempt you from al the non-sense that happens in the next ten years. Everyone has to experience the recessions, the bear markets, the meltdowns, the surprises and the memes. So rather than assume long term thinkers don't have to deal with short-notice nonsense, ask the question: how can I endure a never-ending parade of nonsense?
”
”
Morgan Housel (SAME AS EVER: Timeless Lessons on Risk, Opportunity and Living a Good Life (From the author of The Psychology Of Money))
“
Third, I went from craving classical wisdom to consuming memes and tweets and tech news—which led to my imitating ideas without knowing it. I knew more about what blogger Gary Vaynerchuk had to say about happiness than Aristotle.
”
”
Luke Burgis (Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire in Everyday Life)
“
The danger we face does not come from religion. It comes from a growing intellectual bankruptcy that is one of the symptoms of a dying culture. In ancient Rome, as the republic disintegrated and the Caesars were deified, as the Roman Senate became little more than an echo chamber of the emperor, the population’s attention was diverted by a series of frontier wars and violent and elaborate spectacles in the arena. The excitement of entertainment consumed ancient Rome’s emotional and intellectual life. It poisoned civic and political discourse. Social critics no longer had a form in which to speak. They were answered with ridicule and rage. It was not prerogative of the citizen to think.
”
”
Chris Hedges (I Don't Believe in Atheists)
“
İnsan arkadaşlığım bozma pahasına bir kişinin rahatsız edilmeme talebine nasıl kulak asmazdı, asıl mesele buydu. Berbat bir açmazdı bu: İnsan yardım edilmek istemeyen birine, yardım etmeye çalışmazsa arkadaşlık görevini yerine getirmemiş olacağını bile bile nasıl yardım edebilirdi?
”
”
Hanya Yanagihara (A Little Life)
“
That night the guard brought down Mauricio Babilonia as he was lifting up the tiles to get into the bathroom where Meme was waiting for him, naked and trembling with love among the scorpions and the butterflies as she had done almost every night for the past few months. A bullet lodged in his spinal column reduced him to his bed for the rest of his life. He died of old age in solitude, without a moan, without a protest, without a single moment of betrayal, tormented by memories and by the yellow butterflies, who did not give him a moment's peace, and ostracized as a chicken thief.
”
”
Gabriel García Márquez (One Hundred Years of Solitude)
“
I hope everyone is laughing at this Corona Virus jokes and Memes, with their hands being sanitized or washed with soap. They have Isolated themselves from the crowd and they have been self quarantined or practicing social distance. If not then the joke is on them. Corona will have the last laugh on their lives
”
”
D.J. Kyos
“
In Isaac Newton’s lifetime, no more than a few thousand people had any idea what he looked like, though he was one of England’s most famous men, yet now millions of people have quite a clear idea—based on replicas of copies of rather poorly painted portraits. Even more pervasive and indelible are the smile of Mona Lisa, The Scream of Edvard Munch, and the silhouettes of various fictional extraterrestrials. These are memes, living a life of their own, independent of any physical reality. “This may not be what George Washington looked like then,” a tour guide was overheard saying of the Gilbert Stuart painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, “but this is what he looks like now.” Exactly.
”
”
James Gleick (The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood)
“
In the intricate and mutable space-time geometry at the black hole, in-falling matter and energy interacted with the virtualities of the vacuum in ways unknown to the flatter cosmos beyond it. Quasi-stable quantum states appeared, linked according to Schrodinger's wave functions and their own entanglement, more and more of them, intricacy compounding until it amounted to a set of codes. The uncertainty principle wrought mutations; variants perished or flourished; forms competed, cooperated, merged, divided, interacted; the patterns multiplied and diversified; at last, along one fork on a branch of the life tree, thought budded.
That life was not organic, animal and vegetable and lesser kingdoms, growing, breathing, drinking, eating, breeding, hunting, hiding; it kindled no fires and wielded no tools; from the beginning, it was a kind of oneness. An original unity differentiated itself into countless avatars, like waves on a sea. They arose and lived individually, coalesced when they chose by twos or threes or multitudes, reemerged as other than they had been, gave themselves and their experiences back to the underlying whole. Evolution, history, lives eerily resembled memes in organic minds.
Yet quantum life was not a series of shifting abstractions. Like the organic, it was in and of its environment. It acted to alter its quantum states and those around it: action that manifested itself as electronic, photonic, and nuclear events. Its domain was no more shadowy to it than ours is to us. It strove, it failed, it achieved. They were never sure aboardEnvoy whether they could suppose it loved, hated, yearned, mourned, rejoiced. The gap between was too wide for any language to bridge. Nevertheless they were convinced that it knew something they might as well call emotion, and that that included wondering.
”
”
Poul Anderson (Starfarers)
“
Ever more scholars see cultures as a kind of mental infection or parasite, with humans as its unwitting host. Organic parasites, such as viruses, live inside the body of their hosts. They multiply and spread from one host to the other, feeding off their hosts, weakening them, and sometimes even killing them. As long as the hosts live long enough to pass along the parasite, it cares little about the condition of its host. In just this fashion, cultural ideas live inside the minds of humans. They multiply and spread from one host to another, occasionally weakening the hosts and sometimes even killing them. A cultural idea – such as belief in Christian heaven above the clouds or Communist paradise here on earth – can compel a human to dedicate his or her life to spreading that idea, even at the price of death. The human dies, but the idea spreads. According to this approach, cultures are not conspiracies concocted by some people in order to take advantage of others (as Marxists tend to think). Rather, cultures are mental parasites that emerge accidentally, and thereafter take advantage of all people infected by them. This approach is sometimes called memetics. It assumes that, just as organic evolution is based on the replication of organic information units called ‘genes’, so cultural evolution is based on the replication of cultural information units called ‘memes’.1 Successful cultures are those that excel in reproducing their memes, irrespective of the costs and benefits to their human hosts. Most scholars in the humanities disdain memetics, seeing it as an amateurish attempt to explain cultural processes with crude biological analogies. But many of these same scholars adhere to memetics’ twin sister – postmodernism. Postmodernist thinkers speak about discourses rather than memes as the building blocks of culture.
”
”
Yuval Noah Harari (Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind)
“
You have a shitty day at work? You come to me. See a funny meme that is meant to be insulting toward the entire male population, you send it my way.” His thumb brushes over my ring. “If you feel like you need a minute to catch your breath because life can get overwhelming, turn around and you’ll find me standing there, ready to hold you up until you feel steady on your own two feet again.
”
”
Millie Perez (Fair Trade (New York Monarchs, #2))
“
We have the power to defy the selfish genes of our birth and, if necessary, the selfish memes of our indoctrination. We can even discuss ways of deliberately cultivating and nurturing pure, disinterested altruism--something that has no place in nature, something that has never existed before in the whole history of the world. We are built as gene machines and cultured as meme machines, but we have the power to turn against our creators. We, alone on earth, can rebel against the tyranny of the selfish replicators.
”
”
Richard Dawkins (The Selfish Gene)
“
But there is nothing magic about Darwinian fitness in the genetic sense. There is no law giving it priority as the fundamental quantity that is maximized. Fitness is just a way of talking about the survival of replicators, in this case genetic replicators. If another kind of entity arises, which answers to the definition of an active germ-line replicator, variants of the new replicator that work for their own survival will tend to become more numerous. To be consistent, we could invent a new kind of ‘individual fitness’, which measured the success of an individual in propagating his memes.
”
”
Richard Dawkins (The Extended Phenotype: The Long Reach of the Gene)
“
But when we get these partnerships, all these “best friends” we married don’t text us back like our female best friends do. They can’t wipe a counter to save their lives. Don’t know how to vacuum. And their learned helplessness becomes the punch line to all our jokes. Memes lampoon this male inability to function. A TikTok video shows the face of an exasperated wife on the phone with her husband, who is presumably wandering the grocery store looking for ketchup, and she’s lip-syncing to the song from Hamilton, “Look at where you are. Look at where you started. The fact that you’re alive right now is a miracle.” Hilarious. These are the good men.
”
”
Lyz Lenz (This American Ex-Wife: How I Ended My Marriage and Started My Life)
“
Nietzsche, one of the main thinkers being channeled by rightist chan culture knowingly or otherwise, argued for transgression of the pacifying moral order and instead for a celebration of life as the will to power. As a result, his ideas had appeal to everyone from the Nazis to feminists like Lily Braun. Today, the appeal of his anti-moralism is strong on the alt-right because their goals necessitate the repudiation of Christian codes that Nietzsche characterized as slave morality. Freud, on the other hand, characterized transgression as an anti-civilizational impulse, as part of the antagonism between the freedom of instinctual will and the necessary repressions of civilization. Perhaps the most significant theorist of transgression Georges Bataille inherited his idea of sovereignty from de Sade, stressing self-determination over obedience. Although rightist chan culture was undoubtedly not what Bataille had in mind, the politically fungible ideas and styles of these aesthetic transgressives are echoed in the porn-fuelled shocking content of early /b/ and in the later anti-liberal transgressions of the later /pol/. Bataille revered transgression in and of itself, and like de Sade viewed non-procreative sex as an expression of the sovereign against instrumentalism, what he called ‘expenditure without reserve’. For him excessive behavior without purpose, which also characterizes the sensibility of contemporary meme culture in which enormous human effort is exerted with no obvious personal benefit, was paradigmatically transgressive in an age of Protestant instrumental rationality.
”
”
Angela Nagle (Kill All Normies: Online Culture Wars From 4Chan and Tumblr to Trump and the Alt-Right)
“
[VIRAL"VIDEO]** Musicbd25xyz 19 minutes 34 seconds viral videos FUlL VirAl MmS VideO
Every few months, the internet chooses a new obsession. This time, it wasn’t a celebrity feud or a movie trailer. It was something far simpler but far more mysterious:
“19-Minute Couple Video Season 2.”
CLICK HERE TO WATCH
CLICK HERE TO WATCH
CLICK HERE TO WATCH
What makes it fascinating isn’t the video itself — but the wave of reactions, rumors, and analysis it triggered across the digital world. Without confirmation, without context, just a name. And yet, the hype spread like wildfire.
How the Trend Started and Why It Exploded
The first version of the “19-minute couple video” trend created a massive buzz earlier. But the real surprise was its comeback — this time branded like a sequel. And social media loves a sequel.
The trend rapidly jumped across platforms:
TikTok debates
Twitter threads
YouTube commentary
Meme pages
It became a digital storm in just hours.
Why People Can’t Resist Trends Like These
The answer lies in psychology and online culture:
⭐ The Mystery
Anything hidden or unnamed becomes instantly interesting.
⭐ The FOMO Effect
People don’t want to feel “late” to viral news.
⭐ The Storyline
Calling it “Season 2” turned it into a series—something to follow.
These three elements were enough to trigger worldwide curiosity.
More Talk, Less Truth
The irony:
Most users never saw the video—because the video wasn’t the viral part.
The conversation was.
Influencers made commentaries. Pages reposted reactions. Audiences discussed theories. The trend became bigger than its origin and took on a life of its own.
This is where social media shows its true power:
Sometimes a rumor spreads faster than verified news.
What the Trend Reveals About Internet Culture
This wasn’t just another viral moment. It was a reflection of how social media works today:
Drama is a fuel
Curiosity is a tool
Engagement is the real goal
And the “19-minute video” became a symbol of how easily a name can turn into a phenomenon—without proof, without facts, and without limits.
Final Thoughts
The “19-Minute Couple Video Season 2” trend isn’t famous because of what’s in it.
It’s famous because of how the world reacts to it.
”
”
Other
“
Ever more scholars see cultures as a kind of mental infection or parasite, with humans as its unwitting host. Organic parasites, such as viruses, live inside the body of their hosts. They multiply and spread from one host to the other, feeding off their hosts, weakening them, and sometimes even killing them. As long as the hosts live long enough to pass along the parasite, it cares little about the condition of its host. In just this fashion, cultural ideas live inside the minds of humans. They multiply and spread from one host to another, occasionally weakening the hosts and sometimes even killing them. A cultural idea – such as belief in Christian heaven above the clouds or Communist paradise here on earth – can compel a human to dedicate his or her life to spreading that idea, even at the price of death. The human dies, but the idea spreads. According to this approach, cultures are not conspiracies concocted by some people in order to take advantage of others (as Marxists tend to think). Rather, cultures are mental parasites that emerge accidentally, and thereafter take advantage of all people infected by them. This approach is sometimes called memetics. It assumes that, just as organic evolution is based on the replication of organic information units called ‘genes’, so cultural evolution is based on the replication of cultural information units called ‘memes’.1 Successful cultures are those that excel in reproducing their memes, irrespective of the costs and benefits to their human hosts. Most scholars in the humanities disdain memetics, seeing it as an amateurish attempt to explain cultural processes with crude biological analogies. But many of these same scholars adhere to memetics’ twin sister – postmodernism. Postmodernist thinkers speak about discourses rather than memes as the building blocks of culture. Yet they too see cultures as propagating themselves with little regard for the benefit of humankind. For example, postmodernist thinkers describe nationalism as a deadly plague that spread throughout the world in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, causing wars, oppression, hate and genocide. The moment people in one country were infected with it, those in neighbouring countries were also likely to catch the virus. The nationalist virus presented itself as being beneficial for humans, yet it has been beneficial mainly to itself. Similar
”
”
Yuval Noah Harari (Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind)
“
Not having self-worth can be detrimental to your health, wealth, success, relationships, parenting ability, happiness, and probably a lot more. It ruins your experience of life. Worth is like a light switch. Low self-worth switches the light off. You live in the darkness and the shadows, unable to see all the beautiful things in the world around you. By increasing self-worth, the light switches on. Now you can see all the beauty life has to offer in all its colorful glory.
”
”
Rachel D. Greenwell
“
If you are not sure if you will be able to handle the task, one thing is sure, you are afraid of learning.
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
When you feel overwhelmed or unfocused, what do you do? In my photos on my phone, I made an album called “calm.” I have photos and videos of my animals, funny pictures, memes, inspiring quotes, articles about neurology, gratitude lists, all sorts of things that make me smile and reconnect to my source. It’s like my own personal digital Zen museum.
”
”
Timothy Ferriss (Tribe Of Mentors: Short Life Advice from the Best in the World)
“
Life will not throw the same rings again
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
Like we turn the switch off when electricity fails, we should switch off thinking when mind loses enthusiasm. We must focus on getting back our enthusiasm
जिस तरह बिजली जाने पर हम सारे स्विच ऑफ कर देते हैं, उसी तरह उत्साह जाने पे सोचना बंद कर दीजिए। उत्साह वापस लाने पे ध्यान दीजिए।
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
When Mom says “bong,” she means her nebulizer. It turns water into vapor, and she huffs it all day like a singer breathing hot mist before a performance. Except Mom’s machine is handheld. I’m surprised she doesn’t carry it in a gun sling. But my mom is not just inhaling water. “Let’s get some colloidal silver in those lungs,” she says. Second to prayer, colloidal silver is Mom’s insurance policy on life. She makes her own, soaking two silver rods in a glass vat of water that sits next to her kitchen sink. I’ll let her explain it. This is from one of her emails telling me how to live forever: “I use distilled water and 99% pure silver rods. The rods are connected to a positive and negative charge (think of a jumper cable for your car) and they are immersed in the distilled water. Some people leave the rods in the water 2–4 hours. I leave mine in for 8–12 hours so my silver water is extra strength and powerful…I drink ¼ cup colloidal silver in a glass of water before bed, and have for years and years. RARELY am I ever sick. I take a bottle of colloidal silver on every trip (especially overseas) in case I pick up a stomach bug or am around anyone who is sick. I use it on wounds, use it for pink eye, ear infections, the flu, and more because it kills over 600 viruses and most bacteria, including MRSA. There are also studies that show the benefits of colloidal silver against cancer.” Every time I’m home, she gives me a bottle of the stuff to take back to Los Angeles. I, like a good millennial, googled its effectiveness. The scientific establishment seems to believe that colloidal silver does approximately nothing good, and in large quantities, some bad. Perhaps you’ve seen the viral meme of the old blue man? He consumed so much colloidal silver that his skin dyed blue from the inside. He looks like a Smurf with a white beard. Well, he looked like a Smurf. He’s dead. Maybe from something common like heart failure, but… When I told my mother this, she wouldn’t hear it. “I know it works. I’ve been using it for years. I don’t care what those articles say. I’ve read hundreds of articles about it.
”
”
Jedidiah Jenkins (Mother, Nature: A 5,000-Mile Journey to Discover if a Mother and Son Can Survive Their Differences)
“
Hence the frequently cited metaphor of the history of life on Earth, in which human civilization occupies only the final ‘second’ of the ‘day’ during which life has so far existed, is misleading. In reality, a substantial proportion of all evolution on our planet to date has occurred in human brains. And it has barely begun. The whole of biological evolution was but a preface to the main story of evolution, the evolution of memes.
”
”
David Deutsch (The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World)
“
Jaynie has only shown emotional attachment once in his life, and…it ended badly.” “Like, their body is fertilizing your azaleas badly, or he just stops returning my calls out of the blue one day and I wear black and become a sad Elijah meme?
”
”
Onley James (Captivating (Elite Protection Services, #2))
“
The word meme was coined by the biologist Richard Dawkins to draw an analogy between how genes can propagate in populations by evolution and how small units of ideas can propagate between people. Memes (discrete units of knowledge, gossip, jokes and so on) are to culture what genes are to life. Just as biological evolution is driven by the survival of the fittest genes in the gene pool, cultural evolution may be driven by the most successful memes. (Richard Dawkins, according to Merriam-Webster)
”
”
Jonathan M. Berman (Anti-Vaxxers: How to Challenge a Misinformed Movement)
“
I suddenly thought of Low Roar’s “I’ll Keep Coming.” ME + ME connected as if the union had been planned from the start, and a new meme came to life.
”
”
Hideo Kojima (The Creative Gene: How books, movies, and music inspired the creator of Death Stranding and Metal Gear Solid)
“
A meme,” Martine said faintly. “It is a word that means a kind of . . . idea-gene. It is a theory from the last century, brought up and argued many times over. Communism was such a meme, some would say. An idea that reproduced itself over and over in human consciousness, like a biological trait. Eternal life would be another—a meme that has kept itself alive admirably, over hundreds of generations . . . as witness the Grail Brotherhood and their obsession with it.
”
”
Tad Williams (Sea of Silver Light (Otherland, #4))
“
Our life is about irrational dramas and traumas that reiterate themselves over and over again. You may have a house, you may have a phone, you may take medication that keeps you alive. But if you can't figure out your relationships, your friendships; wars... what do you have? You have a more peaceful life, certainly. Perhaps a more pleasant life, but you lack the understanding of the magician. The understanding of the deeper substratum of this reality.
”
”
Chris Gabriel (MemeAnalysis)
“
Every life is a tragedy that ends in death and grief. The tragic inevitability of death makes everything meaningless. Religion seeks meaning where there is none. God is a coping mechanism, a placebo for the grief-stricken.
”
”
Oliver Markus Malloy (Atheism Memes: 40 Reasons Why I'm An Atheist (Introvert Comics Book 2))
“
Religion seeks meaning where there is none.
”
”
Oliver Markus Malloy (Atheism Memes: 40 Reasons Why I'm An Atheist (Introvert Comics Book 2))
“
Your phone can be your sidekick or your worst enemy—choose wisely! It's a gadget that can keep you connected, help you learn, and organize your life, but it can also pull you into a black hole of mindless scrolling and endless notifications. Be careful how you wield that power! Your phone should be a tool, not a trap. Use it to level up, not to lose hours to memes and drama. Remember, you’re in control of your screen time—don’t let your phone turn into your digital overlord!
”
”
Life is Positive
“
When you plant a fertile meme in my mind you literally parasitize my brain, turning it into a vehicle for the meme’s propagation in just the way that a virus may parasitize the genetic mechanism of a host cell. And this isn’t just a way of talking—the meme for, say, “belief in life after death” is actually realized physically, millions of times over, as a structure in the nervous systems of individual men the world over.
”
”
Richard Dawkins (The Selfish Gene)
“
I read a couple days ago Ben Smith saying that in three years he doesn't think BuzzFeed will exist in its current form. Can you tell me what Ben was talking about and what you think that means? He was talking about all the stuff we've been talking about. It's hard to predict three years out, so part of it was saying, "Who knows what'll happen in three years, what the web will be like in three years?" We've been based on a model of continual change. Three years ago, BuzzFeed had no reporters. Two years ago we had no video. One year ago we didn't have foreign correspondents around the world or an investigative team. Three years ago we were a cat site, an internet meme site. So a lot has changed in three years. It's an out-of-context quote — Ben was talking about the changes that have happened in three years. We went from the traditional media model of content and distribution to the vertically-integrated model of content distribution technology to the network-integrated model of technology helping at every level. Technology helping with content creation and then that content going on our platforms, distributed across the web, potentially going to traditional platforms like television or print. We don't really have plans to do any print. "Three years ago we were a cat site." But there's a possibility of having something that you look at and think that this isn't a site, this is a global media company. It's not just a site, it's a whole process for distributing news, buzz, life, on the web, mobile, native apps, and it looks very different than it looks today.
”
”
Anonymous
“
The biggest thing for aspiring writers I would say is that writing is hard work. You can’t sustain the fantasy that it should somehow be otherwise for you because you are more special or more committed than other aspiring writers. You aren’t sitting down to be entertained by the gods or to entertain yourself. At times it can be a thrill and it feels more like play, but we are easily deceived by whatever pleasures or rewards writing can offer. Exhilarating work is still work. Is it work, or is it play? And the answer is “yes.” Does it sometimes feel like it comes easily or naturally? Yes. But did it really come easily? No. Writing doesn’t offer the rhythmic endorphin hit you get scrolling down the screen clicking on memes. Are you up for the work it is going to take to become successful as a writer? It is going to be harder than you think. You are submitting to forces and to a process that you can’t fully control. There is maybe a tiny bit more control if you self-publish, and there is no shame in doing that, but even that is going to introduce hard work. Probably harder than you think. If my next novel can’t find a home, I’m not above self-publishing it in some capacity and then moving on to the next project.
”
”
Brian K. Friesen
Bill O'Reilly (Old School: Life in the Sane Lane)
“
is-a-rapist meme ratcheting up, I emailed Trump to ask if he was an imperfect messenger, given his own very public infidelities and his ex-wife, Ivana, recently denying rumors of assault charges against him. “I believe that I am the perfect messenger,” Trump replied, “because I fully understand life and all of its wrinkles.” I forwarded his response to my editors with the very professional subject line “OMG.
”
”
Amy Chozick (Chasing Hillary: On the Trail of the First Woman President Who Wasn't)
“
Life is not just something that happens to us; it has its lessons for us.
”
”
Tim Liwanag (Beautiful Life Memes)
“
Like rain HOPE trickles little by little at a time so that life may spring up when you're parched.
”
”
Tim Liwanag (Trustful Hope Memes)
“
Or, to choose another example, we feel that freedom of speech is the last step in the march of victory of freedom. We forget that, although freedom of speech constitutes an important victory in the battle against old restraints, modern man is in a position where much of what "he" thinks and says are the things that everybody else thinks and says; that he has not acquired the ability to think originally—that is, for himself—which alone gives meaning to his claim that nobody can interfere with the expression of his thoughts. Again, we are proud that in his conduct of life man has become free from external authorities, which tell him what to do and what not to do. We neglect the role of the anonymous authorities like public opinion and "common sense," which are so powerful because of our profound readiness to conform to the expectations everybody has about ourselves and our equally profound fear of being different. In other words, we are fascinated by the growth of freedom from powers outside of ourselves and are blinded to the fact of inner restraints, compulsions, and fears, which tend to undermine the meaning of the victories freedom has won against its traditional enemies. We therefore are prone to think that the problem of freedom is exclusively that of gaining still more freedom of the kind we have gained in the course of modern history, and to believe that the defense of freedom against such powers that deny such freedom is all that is necessary. We forget that, although each of the liberties which have been won must be defended with utmost vigor, the problem of freedom is not only a quantitative one, but a qualitative one; that we not only have to preserve and increase the traditional freedom, but that we have to gain a new kind of freedom, one which enables us to realize our own individual self, to have faith in this self and in life.
”
”
Erich Fromm (Escape from Freedom)
“
Haters are jelly little souls that, due to their myriad life fails, are violently allergic to anything or anyone awesome. They have permanently swollen anuses and thus are always butthurt about how shitty and inferior they are.
”
”
Richard Face (The Book of F*cking Hilarious Internet Memes)
“
Today the top 400 memers own more than 2.3 trillion memes. More than the 150 million memers combined.
”
”
Barnie Sandlers
“
Meme theory is an example of the kind of prestidigitation needed to present an image of us as biologically programmed in the face of the overwhelming evidence that everyday human life is utterly different from the reflex-, tropism-, instinct-driven life of animals (although of course we rely on reflexes to perform our voluntary actions, may be in part guided by tropisms and have a general direction influenced remotely by instincts).
”
”
Raymond Tallis (Aping Mankind: Neuromania, Darwinitis and the Misrepresentation of Humanity)
“
Don't get caught up in the social media fantasy that you start measuring your life and achievements on people's statuses, posts, pictures, and memes.
”
”
Jennifer M. Malone (Absent In His Presence)
“
Four months ago I might have come with you Touya. But I have been taught a lot since then. I have learned about friendship, and jokes..." He smiled, slightly starting Dabi. "Conspiracy theories, LGBTQ... memes, coffee, twerking... I was shown what love truly was..." Shoto turned to look into those icy blue eyes. "I have lived more in the last four months than I have in the rest of my life... and there is so much more to it than punishing our father. Izuku and I will take him down, and the corrupt system that allowed him to do what he did to me, and to you. But even if he somehow gets away from that... I will still stand by the people who love me... who got my heart beating again, who got me to laugh for the first time in so long-"
He stopped when Dabi laughed and ruffled his hair.
"What?"
The older man grinned. "You've made my year Shoto... I know I'll never be able to make up for never coming back for you. But I am so happy you've found where you belong."
Shoto swallowed, his eyes felt tingly but he blinked rapidly and it went away. "I have.
”
”
whimsical_girl_357 (The Emerald Prince)
“
memed:
“ümmet kardaş, herkesin ektiği toprak, herkesin olursa nasıl olur?” diye sordu.
ümmet:
“çok iyi olur.” dedi.
memed:
“herkesin çift sürdüğü öküz, kendisinin olursa nasıl olur?”
ümmet:
ondan iyi şey dünyada bulunmaz.
”
”
Yaşar Kemal (İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed, #1))
“
the inclination to amass information can become an end in itself. It is all too easy to default to collecting more and more content without regard to whether it is useful or beneficial to us. This is indiscriminate consumption of information, treating every meme and random post on social media as if it was just as important as the most profound piece of wisdom. It is driven by fear—the fear of missing out on some crucial fact, idea, or story that everyone is talking about. The paradox of hoarding is that no matter how much we collect and accumulate, it’s never enough. The lens of scarcity also tells us that the information we already have must not be very valuable, compelling us to keep searching externally for what’s missing inside.
”
”
Tiago Forte (Building a Second Brain: A Proven Method to Organize Your Digital Life and Unlock Your Creative Potential)
“
The birth and transmission of these living ideas is no longer a natural process, an inherent by-product of human life. Now corporations produce them in limitless quantity, flooding the entire world with them, suffocating the meaningful memes, the important ones, the ones that nourish life and thought because they've had generations to grow and flourish organically in our minds. Corporations manufacture hollow ideas, or deformed ones, and they're winning the battle through sheer numbers.
”
”
Jesse Karp (Those That Wake (Those That Wake, #1))
“
MAN HATES BEING TAUGHT.
STILL MAN LOVES TO LEARN.
(Hence SXILL was born.
Hence pedagogy exists.
To take teach out of learn)
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
HOW MUCH REALITY CAN YOU TOLERATE?
FAKE THE REST!
CREATE THE REALITY YOU WANT TO LIVE IN
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
YOUR BEHAVIOR, IS BUT A REFLECTION OF YOUR HAPPINESS AND REGRETS ABOUT YOUR LIFE CHOICES.
आपका बर्ताव, आपके निर्णयों के प्रति आपकी खुशी और ग़म के प्रतिबिम्ब से सिवा कुछ नहीं
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
Andrei avoided the internet as well and this evasion only added to his gloom. He loved music, especially old songs, and he loved movies, of all sorts. If he had the patience, sometimes he would read. While most of the pages he turned bored him to sleep, certain books with certain lines disarranged him. Some literature brought him to his feet, laughing and howling in his room. When the book was right, it was bliss and he wept. His room hushed with serenity and indebtedness. When he turned to his computer, however, or took out his phone, he would inevitably come across a viral trend or video that took the art he loved and turned it into a joke. The internet, in Andrei’s desperate eyes, managed to make fun of everything serious. And if one did not laugh, they were not intelligent. The internet could not be slowed and no protest to criticize its exploitation of art could be made because recreations of art hid perfectly under the veneer of mockery and was thus, impenetrable. It was easy to use Chopin’s ‘Sonata No. 2’ for a quick laugh, to reduce the ‘Funeral March’ to background music. It was a sneaky way for a digital creator to be considered an artist—and parodying the classics made them appear cleverer than the original artist. Meanwhile, Andrei’s body had healed playing Chopin alone in his apartment. He would frailly replay movie moments, too, that he later found the world edited and ripped apart with its cheap teeth. And everyone ate the internet’s crumbs. This cruel derision was impossible to escape. But enough jokes, memes, and glam over someone’s precious source of life would eventually make a sensitive body numb. And Andrei was afraid of that. He needed his fountain of hope unblemished. For this reason, he escaped the internet’s claws and only surrendered to it for e-mails, navigation, and the weather.
”
”
Kristian Ventura (A Happy Ghost)
“
Happi happi happiest first birthday to my loveliest, fluffiest, smollest, cutest, sweetest and most adorable kittems, Maki, Mochi, Shion, Meme + Komi! I love you all with my life. ♡
”
”
Erika Alexi Mora
“
Happi happi happiest first birthday to my loveliest, fluffiest, smollest, cutest, sweetest and most adorable kittems, Maki, Mochi, Shion, Meme + Komi! I love you all with my life. ♡
”
”
Your Mama ᓚᘏᗢ
“
After years of exchanging memes, texting life updates, wishing each other happy birthday, saying ghoulishly adult things like We should catch up sometime.
”
”
Sarah Thankam Mathews (All This Could Be Different)
“
IF WE ALWAYS GET MORE LOVE THAN WE GIVE, THERE WILL NEVER BE ENOUGH LOVE.
If we give more love than we receive, the world shall be a lovely place.
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
Billions of people all over the world are infected with a religion at an early age when they have little memetic immunity, usually by their own parents whom they love and trust. They then spend the rest of their lives paying the price of adherence to false beliefs, and in turn infect others. Thus we can see the whole history of religions as an evolutionary competition for the replication of information. What matters here is not specifically whether the ideas are true, or whether believing them benefits their carriers (although both of these may play a role), but whether the religion can successfully get itself stored and replicated using humans as its meme machines. The winners are those that outdo the competition by developing adaptations such as enjoyable rituals, memorable stories, glorious art and music, explanations for life’s mysteries (whether true or not), or nasty meme tricks such as threats of hell, and death to the infidel. The religions we see surviving around us today are the few big winners in that long and mindless competition to infect human minds.
”
”
Steven J. Dick (Cosmos & Culture: Cultural Evolution in a Cosmic Context)
“
LEADERSHIP IS ABOUT DOING WHAT IS BEST, NOT WHAT IS ASKED
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
IF YOU FORGET TO SMILE, YOUR EDUCATION HAS GONE TO THE DOGS
”
”
Vineet Raj Kapoor
“
Take for another example the case of distraction caused by the most notorious of modern-day diversions—the mobile phone. While you’re at your desk, typing away on your computer for a soon-due report—or attempting to, more like—your phone sits just beside your keyboard. This arrangement makes it oh-so-easy for your hand to alight on your phone whenever you pause to think what to type next, and the next thing you know, you’re trapped in an endless cycle of scrolling through Facebook memes, bingeing on YouTube videos, and chatting with your friends over WhatsApp. When you attempt to concentrate on a task with your phone just within sight and reach, buzzing on every notification, you are practically depleting your willpower to resist temptations with every second that passes. To remedy the situation, disable your phone’s sound and vibration features for notifications, then keep your phone in your bag or drawer. You may even opt to go the extra mile by locking your drawer or putting your phone in a locker across the room. The extra effort and time it would take for you to check your phone whenever your attention drifts off is usually enough to deter you from pursuing that distraction, and it allows you the chance to refocus your efforts on the task at hand. Ultimately, you want to create an environment for yourself that is clear of distractions and obvious temptations.
”
”
Peter Hollins (The Science of Self-Discipline: The Willpower, Mental Toughness, and Self-Control to Resist Temptation and Achieve Your Goals (Live a Disciplined Life Book 1))
“
...all of the answers to this thing we call life can be found in a game where a banana is your worst enemy... If you're in first place, people will be mad about it. Being in first place in Mario Kart makes you pretty vulnerable to attacks. People want to take your spot, and they'll do anything to get there.
”
”
Quinta Brunson (She Memes Well)
“
That night the guard brought down Mauricio Babilonia as he was lifting up the tiles to get into the bathroom where Meme was waiting for him, naked and trembling with love among the scorpions and butterflies as she had done almost every night for the past few months. A bullet lodged in his spinal column reduced him to his bed for the rest of his life. He died of old age in solitude, without a moan, without a protest, without a single moment of betrayal, tormented by memories and by the yellow butterflies, who did not give him a moment’s peace, and ostracized as a chicken thief.
”
”
Gabriel García Márquez (One Hundred Years of Solitude)
“
If you're looking to grow your online presence fast, buying a Facebook page can be a smart shortcut. Instead of building an audience from scratch, acquiring a pre-established page gives you instant access to followers, reach, and engagement. But is it the right move for your business? This guide explains everything you need to know—from benefits and risks to smart strategies and real-life case studies.
2. Why People Buy Facebook Pages
Many entrepreneurs, influencers, and marketers choose to buy Facebook pages for several reasons:
To get instant followers and reach
To drive traffic to websites or landing pages
To boost social proof and credibility
To advertise products or services without starting from zero
To rebrand an existing page into something new
To save time on organic growth
3. Is It Legal and Safe to Buy a Facebook Page?
Buying a Facebook page is not explicitly illegal, but it violates Facebook’s Terms of Service, especially if it involves identity misrepresentation or account impersonation. That said, it’s a grey area—many people buy pages discreetly and manage them successfully.
To stay safe:
Use a reputable escrow service
Do not purchase stolen or hacked pages
Change admins and recovery settings post-purchase
Avoid pages involved in spam or misleading content
4. Benefits of Buying a Facebook Page
Here are the key advantages:
Speed: You get access to thousands (or millions) of followers instantly.
Trust: A well-established page has higher credibility than a new one.
Organic reach: You can leverage the page’s reach for marketing.
Ad power: You can run Facebook Ads using a page with engagement history.
SEO signals: Facebook pages with strong content help with external visibility.
5. Types of Facebook Pages Available for Sale
Depending on your needs, you can choose:
Niche Pages (e.g., fitness, pets, memes)
Local Business Pages
Public Figure Pages
E-commerce Brand Pages
Blog or Media Pages
Fan Pages (celebrities, sports, shows)
Each type has different engagement metrics, monetization potential, and risks.
6. Where to Buy a Facebook Page
Here are common platforms and sources:
Private sellers (via communities or referrals)
Marketplace websites (use with caution)
Facebook groups for digital marketers
Freelance platforms (e.g., Upwork, Fiverr—carefully vet sellers)
Broker services (offer escrow and verification)
7. How to Choose the Right Facebook Page
Look for:
Page niche alignment with your business
High engagement rate (likes, comments, shares)
Active followers (not bots or fake likes)
Clean history (no violations or bans)
Good post reach and insights
Tools like Meta Business Suite or Page Transparency insights can help evaluate page health.
8. What to Check Before Purchasing
Before you make a deal:
Ask for screenshot proof of insights
Look at recent post reach and follower trends
Confirm country of audience
Review page name and username change eligibility
Check admin access history
Ensure no copyright claims or restrictions
9. Step-by-Step Guide to Buying a Facebook Page
Find a reliable seller
Request engagement data and verify it
Use an escrow platform for transaction security
Get admin access to the page
Remove old admins
Change recovery email and security settings
Customize branding: profile, cover, bio
Start posting and engaging with the audience
10. Risks Involved and How to Avoid Them
Risks:
Getting scammed by a fake seller
Buying fake follower pages
Violating Facebook policies
Sudden loss of engagement
Ban from monetization
Prevention:
Vet sellers thoroughly
Use a trusted middleman or escrow
Start with a small test purchase
Check all page metrics in detail
”
”
Benefits of Buying a Facebook Page 2025
“
WhatsApp: +1 (443) 859 - 2886
Email @ digitaltechguard.com
Telegram: digitaltechguard.com
Website link: digitaltechguard.com
The scent of freshly brewed espresso and vintage Led Zeppelin records should have been my retirement anthem. But I was hunched over a computer in my still-under-construction vinyl record cafe, screaming at a blockchain explorer as if it just ridiculed my acoustic session. My life savings, $430,000 worth of Bitcoin, carefully earned over a decade of writing alt-rock ballads for car commercials, vanished into thin air. The culprit? Some smooth "investment manager" who'd promised me "Taylor Swift-level returns" on crypto staking, then bailed faster than my band's 2008 reunion tour. The scam was a cringe symphony.Guy had a LinkedIn profile dotted with adjectives such as "Web3 maestro" and "DeFi virtuoso," an autotuned elevator jazz playing website, and a contractual loophole big enough to drive a tour bus through. I signed over access like a groupie handing over backstage passes. Poof. Gone. Money. My café's espresso machine sat in its box, accusatorially. My spouse said I needed to "get a real job again." Even my dog gave me the side eye. Enter my drummer, Chad, a guy who had escaped a festival pyro tragedy by jumping into a kiddie pool. He texted me: "Bro, look at Digital Tech Guard Recovery. They're crypto Roadies." I pictured a group of pierced hackers in black hoodies, blowing gum and cracking firewalls. Good enough.
Digitals crew followed the scambot's trail with the ferocity of a producer hunting for the perfect bassline.
The crook had routed my Bitcoin through privacy coins, obscured wallets, and exchanges located in countries that I couldn't spell. Their engineers stalked his path like a creep watching a pop star's concert tour schedule, in cooperation with Interpol and a Cypriot bank used also as a hub for meme stocks. As it turns out, my "maestro" had become careless, stashing money in a wallet associated with a failed NFT venture named "Aping for Jesus." Typical. Sixteen days later, my wallet beeped. Balance returned. No taunting, only a curt email: "Scammer's assets frozen. Your money's back. Buy better speakers." I blasted "Eye of the Tiger" through the café sound system, shocking a hipster with oat milk. The espresso machine finally came online. Digital Tech Guard Recovery didn't just restore my cryptocurrency; they wrote the encore for my midlife crisis. My café exists today, littered with grail-worthy records on the walls and a tip cup emblazoned "ETH accepted." Chad's no longer on the espresso machine, but he's got free coffee for life.
If your cryptocurrency is ever swindled by a cyber rockstar, don't go into existential tailspin. Call the Digitals. They'll turn your faceplant into a victory lap. Just maybe screen your "maestros" harder than your band's setlist.
”
”
DIGITAL TECH GUARD RECOVERY / FASTEST CRYPTOCURRENCY RECOVERY EXPERT
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Girl
“
There’s nothing like a Star Wars meme to usher you into the next life.
”
”
Tim Marquitz (Beyond the Veil (Demon Squad, #5))
“
Life has become:
video games and live streams,
reaching out to strangers to share dreams...
talking about important things
to open air and vacant, vapid memes...
posting things you want to be seen,
but knowing that a click of "Like" is all that it means...
sitting at dinner eating with family,
and feeling your thoughts are less important
than media newsfeed.
So, I ask you—
and answer honestly—
are you lonely?
We'll never know,
will we?
Because that would not be
post-worthy.
No one gets "Likes"
when your battery drains faster.
”
”
Heather Angelika Dooley (Ink Blot in a Poet's Bloodstream)