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At what age does the favebook love letter on valentine's day go from cute to sad?

Mar 11, 2020
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There is certainly a point when telling Facebook you love someone compared to telling them you love them gets super insecure. What point is that for you?
 
Saw a bunch of posts yesterday from my 40-something year-old friends addressing their significant others… like, “Happy Valentine’s Day to the most beautiful, caring, loving, sweetest, blah, blah, blah, doesn’t put out, blah, blah, blah, but if I post this message on Facebook so everyone sees how much I love her on Facebook but in reality I don’t pay her much attention, blah, blah, blah, she might give me a handy later. Oh, and check out this dozen roses I got her, blah, blah, blah. And box of chocolates, blah, blah, blah.”
 
I kind of think of being on Facebook at all as sad. Pick a little talk a little pick a little talk a little cheep cheep cheep post an unhinged rant about what you just saw on TV pick a little more
 
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I kind of think of being on Facebook at all as sad. Pick a little talk a little pick a little talk a little cheep cheep cheep post an unhinged rant about what you just saw on TV pick a little more
I sort of thought the only people still on Facebook were well past retirement age.
 
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Facebook is good for bragging about your kids and your vacation and being jealous when your friends' are better.
 
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Wife and I both have FB and we don't address Vday, birthdays, or other such special days for others to see. About 90% of the couples that do are miserable together IRL and I'm positive the other 10% are, I just can't prove it.
 
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