Jump to navigation. Hi yall! I decided to stay in on a Friday, just sitting here watching a movie and seeing what everyone was up to this week on TKP. Anyway, I just thought of something I thought could be pointless but fun.

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When it comes to internet culture, discussion often focuses on the big picture: Viral memes that mutate over months and draw in millions of participants, vast world-striding platforms with powerful and menacing algorithms; influencers with global political clout and hackers with the backing of nation-states. Over the course of the last decade, the internet and the people, businesses, and institutions that call it home have matured into an astonishingly powerful force. This list is not about that. This is a list about posts. A comment, a tweet, a status update, a Story, a forum contribution, a blog post, a photo, a video, even an email — these are all posts. Just as the cell is the building block of all organic life, the post is the building block of all online culture, the raw matter out of which memes, in-jokes, dance challenges, and trend stories are born. Others can debate the greatest memes of the decade or the most powerful internet personalities. I am interested in those those individual instances of human ingenuity, or derangement, that best expressed digital culture as it crystalized in the s.
That conversation prompted me to find and read through this sub, and there's some seriously disturbing shit here. If you can't do that, realizing that your partner may never come around to your side of things, you are not ready to marry this person. If you and she are sealed in a Mormon temple, your children will be can be sealed to you. Which is an absolute lie. I love talking religion with him and I have never pressured him to change his habits or anything else about him. By the time you are done, you'll have all of the basics down and will have the framework to know what to ask next without any confusion. She encourages me to develop my skills and talents, and provides an example in several of those areas.
There is no such thing as a perfect Mormon family- regardless of whether the parents are sealed or not. All this actually needs is some stamps, pre-printed envelopes, and a few seconds to dash off a note, kiss the paper, and drop it in a mailbox. Not in endless discussions of temple marriage, not ever. It sucks but ultimately what Mormonism does to people is it makes them value adherence to church more than their relationships with people.