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Reply to "People who congratulate their kids on social media, like Facebook, but their kids aren't on it"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]You can say the same thing about wishing a happy mothers day but your mom isnt on FB. Wishing a happy anniversary to your spouse who isnt on FB. Dumb AF. [/quote] +1. Narcissism at its finest.[/quote] That ... isn't narcissism. Narcissists generally don't wish others well like that.[/quote] They are doing it so that they look good (I'm not sure if that still fits a narc pov, just clarifying). They aren't actually wishing anyone well, they are showing "I'm such a good daughter! I wished my mom a happy mothers day, even though I know she will never see this, but everyone else will! Yay go me!" kind of thing. Or "[b]Look at how in looooove we are! Everyone should be jealous of our relationship!" for relationship type posts.[/b] [/quote] The bolded seems the truest of all your examples. Pretty much everyone can name a divorced couple in their circle who made a habit of excessively posting about their amazing marriage. Isn't it a cliche that people renew their wedding vows right before separating? LOL I don't necessarily agree about the other examples tho. Maybe you are just surrounded by more conceited people.[/quote]
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