Wednesday, 29 July 2009

Dull dull dull.

Why oh why I'm telling this to the world i will never know.

It's fun to get everything out on the off chance that a randomer will read and think what an obsessive, sad teenager i actually am. Sitting at home writing a blog about my life and how my day was. The Internet: every body's friend. Funny how the web has developed to this stage that most now see the Internet... as a person. It's built an identity for itself, children and adults alike can share their memories and express themselves even if nobody else will listen. Faith in a system with no emotion, built on communities... the whole 'web 2.0' theory really does excite me about the possibilities that can and will happen, don't ask me why. I don't have an answer...

It's odd how someone can become so reliant on the Internet, so physically attached to it that they live off it. That they practically spend their day on MSN or Facebook or whatever. This is why I've started to read a lot more books. I'm trying not to spend too long on these sites and applications, because i spend way too much time on them at the moment... I need to get out more but every time a chance comes up for me to go out, i end up not going. Maybe it's that i moan constantly about being bored and that I'm doing nothing and then someone asks me to go somewhere and i don't actually want to. I've been sitting in my house and going out for the most tedious of things for the majority of this holiday... and it's dull.

So who wants to go out, let's say...

You, me... at six?

2 comments:

  1. Yep same, dull holiday at the mo...
    Good luck trying to avoid the internet because it's addictive... too addictive - especially Facebook! Ahh miss the good old days when I had no PC LOL xD

    Hm, I wonder what the world's going to be like in 100 years time; technology is taking over our lives xD

    ReplyDelete
  2. I dont even want to think about whats it going to be by the time i die.

    Internet killed everything.
    Hey! And im from the "manual rewind" generation

    ReplyDelete