Originally posted by Safety Guy
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I understand completely that there is a "behavior continuum"(I like that term.) established on this site and that my behavior is outside that continuum. My posts are with few exceptions long, and I am well aware that some may hold that against me. After all the education I've lived through, it is just the way my mind works. I could change, but it wouldn't be me. In spite of that, I can completely understand that if you are trying to scan through a thread, coming upon one of my responses can be a big bump in the road. I have the exact same reaction when I'm reading a thread that isn't particularly interesting to me and I come upon a long post. I'll usually persevere, but it isn't always pleasant.
I get the same feeling when I open any book and find page after page of dense text with hardly any white space. Like looking inside a coffin. I feel like closing the coffin as quickly as possible, unless the writer has a lively style of writing about something of interest to me.
That's why I continue writing long. I figure I'm directly addressing my remarks to the member with the problem and assume he would never say to me, "Thanks for the help. I just wish there had been a little less of it." If it looks like the lid of an open coffin to the rest, I figure they can jump over it .
The one thing about this site that holds me is that I am passionately in awe of these cars. I think the designers of our cars found the perfect balance between economy and power and produced the ideal car for most American drivers. Without all the hyped-up advertising pressure on Americans to buy expensive, over-powered cars I truly believe 60 to 70 percent of all cars in this country would be Festivas, Aspires, or cars just like them.
Without my affection for these cars I wouldn't be here at all, and certainly wouldn't have remained in an environment so foreign to me as this. So, the next time you want to tell me to lighten up or want to beat you head to a bloody pulp on my computer screen, repeat to yourself. "He may be a little different, but no one loves our cars more." And then, lighten up.
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