Another comment full of appraisal that may have gone lost if … Akismet had not saved it from definite death. It may seem a little bit ridiculous but we are always so stupidly happy when someone says something good about what we have done. Today, 12.11.2006, I discovered thus this beautiful comment:

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I met with my best friend today. he’s very kind and understand me quick. We talked about many interesting things. Nevermind. I found good article on web that impressed me. you can look on it. 

“My incredible success has attracted a lot of people, which is not surprising on the other hand, and thus I have been asked by a curious GM to which school I have been (if you think you’ll get another, you are quite mistaken) — (possible publicity for original ‘marrons’), and who will certainly be horribly disappointed by knowing that I just studied … philosophy. Now, what does philosophy have to do with publicity and t-shirt slogans, this poor woman asks herself (all are women in my imagination, it’s easier to talk to them because they are careful listeners, and don’t get immediately angry if it happens that you know something more than her, although she usually hides away her marvelled surprise and obscure intentionality of copying the idea behind a somewhat detached air). She says the idea came a little later.In any case, I have to admit that even if you can relate philosophy to publicity far away and distantly through words and language, the one has nowadays quite little to do with the other. Two factors do though allow to understand how I was trapped by the irresistible attraction power of publicity. One was my dealing with psychological disturbance from the point of view of language. As someone who is deeply psychicly disturbed is not understandable and the reference for emotional stability is the feeling of belonging deriving from the fact of being understood, I used to try ‘understanding’ by combining appearing words or broken sentences with possible meaning, which gave the most hilarious combinations a mind may ever conceive. Further, I tried to put into words the tones and undertones conveyed, so that suddenly it became possible to put together the said and the unsaid, with very funny results (sometimes). Finally I met Hannah, who had an incredible sense of humour and made me laugh for hours and hours. I tried to ‘crack’ her system: the way she combined words in order to have these very flashy combinations.As our jo … “

Very nice article. Thanks to author. 

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