>>15981534>even then the things that can be perceived as complex can be mundane at times tooSure, I agree. It just depends on the conversation that follows and how well the participants can touch on whatever the subject is, that makes it come out as mundane in experience or not, in the end.
I consider a basic exchange of "how's your day been" and "x, how about you?" and then nothing else after that, as what's soul-drainingly mundane. And that's pretty much what I see blogposting as around imageboards.
Not that it's lost on me that I conversate in that way too much, also. Could delve into as why, but not to tangent.
>other reasons such as not wanting to share their life or thoughts with other people out of insecurity or even for privacy reasons.With some people that may be the case, although I think for the majority it's just that they believe their opinions on things aren't even worth sharing and they should rather keep everything they say brief and/or inflammatory, simply because that nobody will care if they don't, or look down on them for it because it's not what's encouraged, or something of that sort. The reasons for that are another thing on their own.
But, anyhow, I feel that other way of thinking is seriously flawed in itself, anyhow.
>insecurityThat's just redundant, at least here. Anonymous imageboards are exactly where you come to be oversharing and free of insecurity, and say the things that you can't in most other places, at least not without bother. Not in a matter of OPSEC, but in the meaning that it ultimately won't affect things outside of here.
Plus, I really don't see a reason as to why you should be insecure of sharing your thoughts on things such as the superior method of peeing. That's a pathological issue, at that point.
So, for most people that you see I think it's just Twitter brainrot, that doesn't allow them to give their thoughts on anything other than the current thing or what's popular, beyond a brief remark.
Char limit.