Monday, January 24, 2011

Your words lasting forever?

I have discussed forever in a pervious post and I dared to test it's definition. I was expressing my feelings for that potent word that streams continuously through the minds of most every human being. I dared to voice my opinions on forever while I was hypocritical about my own yearnings for it to disprove me. I hoped to be proven wrong. I hoped to be put in my place by forever. I dared it to prove something to me.

Now, in a much less philosophical sense, I guess you could say that some things are on the verge of possibly lasting forever. Every idea, thought or vision that is placed on the internet is going to last "forever". So, when I was reading a social media website today, and I stumbled upon an entertaining and somewhat intriguing idea I was compelled to share it with all of you.

Before I reveal what it is to you, I want to discuss my opinion on one other thing. Our writing. Most everyone can verbalize or visualize their ideas into a sentence or a picture or a movement, but when we have gone forward ten years and look back, do we still agree with it? We voice our opinions but ten years later are we eating our words? I would guess the answer for most everyone would be yes because we are ever changing and growing.

So, back to my point of reference for this blog. If you have a Twitter account you are most likely "tweeting" or "retweeting" on a regular basis. Do you love everything you tweet or retweet? My guess is yes, why else would you have written it. However, will you like it ten years from now? If the answer is yes, then Tweet-Rings is allowing you the opportunity for your tweets to "Last Forever".


Do you want to wear your thoughts? I guess if the answer is yes and you are afraid of a tattoo then you can just "tweet" it and then have it engraved on a ring you can wear forever (or as long as it fits and you don't lose it).


We cling to our own point of view, as though everything
 depended on it. Yet our opinions have no permanence; like 
autumn and winter, they gradually pass away.
- Chuang Tzu

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