Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by satchmo on
Thu Dec 15th 2005 at 5:58pm
satchmo
member
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Registered:
Nov 24th 2004
Occupation: pediatrician
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
I was dropping off some dry cleaning this morning before work, and I ran into one of my patients from my previous employment. She said to me "You're such a good doctor. We all missed you when you left the practice." Nothing brightens up my day like a good compliment.
That got me thinking, however. I told my wife that if something were to happen to me, she must log on the SnarkPit and tell you guys what happened to me. Even though we're thousands of miles apart, we share our joy and sorrow, perhaps even more so than our close friends near us.
No one else can really relate to the geeky elation when we get a certain setting for light_environment or a particular lightmapped shadow to work just right. No one can understand the devastation when an error destroys the map. That's why we come here. We are the only ones who can relate to each other in our mapping world.
So, make the proper arrangement in advance. So one day, if an accident were to befall on you, we know what happened.
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by Underdog on
Thu Dec 15th 2005 at 6:28pm
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Dec 12th 2004
Occupation: Sales-Construction
Location: United States
Yes. My family knows to drop a line.
You know that scene where Ace Ventura leaves the Monk monastery? :sad:
There is no history until something happens, then there is.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by G4MER on
Thu Dec 15th 2005 at 6:53pm
G4MER
floaty snark rage
member
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Location: USA
NO, because the first rule of the snarkpit is your dont talk about the snarkpit.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by habboi on
Thu Dec 15th 2005 at 10:40pm
Posted
2005-12-15 10:40pm
habboi
The Spammer of Snarkpit
member
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Dec 11th 2004
Location: United Kingdom
I always used to think about that and wondered how people on the internet would find out I was gone...Perhaps in time they'd realise.
Posted
2005-12-15 11:07pm
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When someone disappears everyone just assumes they grew tired of
visiting. Having a loved one let the forum know would be the only
way they'd realize what happened.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by satchmo on
Thu Dec 15th 2005 at 11:58pm
Posted
2005-12-15 11:58pm
satchmo
member
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Nov 24th 2004
Occupation: pediatrician
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
For all we know, Orpheus could be dead or in a coma. We would never know because his family wasn't instructed to inform us.
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge
Posted
2005-12-16 12:50am
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Apr 7th 2004
Location: USA
Interesting concept...
...I never thought of this.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by French Toast on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 3:05am
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Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
At 14 I'm not planning on dying any time soon, but I'll often talk with my brother about anything interesting said here.
It's mostly about what movie to see next based on the reviews in
Recently Watched. Thanks Crono, I'm off to King Kong this weekend
:smile:
3012 posts
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Registered:
Feb 15th 2005
<div><div>
<div class="quote"><div class="quotetitle">? quoting UD:</div><div class="quotetext">Morbidity aside and all that, damned few actually plan.
</div></div></div></div>
Very true, but he's probably still got four more years to go before he
realizes his own mortality. It took me until I was 18 myself to
realize I'm not invincible (getting into a car crash can really wake
you up).
So anyway, let's not ruin it for him.
As for whether or not my family or friends would get you guys word if
anything happened to me, that's not a possibility. No one really
knows I visit this site daily, because my friends aren't into this type
of thing, and my parents just wouldn't get it. My dad can barely
turn on the computer, he has no concept of online forums or communities :smile:
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by satchmo on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 5:29am
satchmo
member
2077 posts
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Registered:
Nov 24th 2004
Occupation: pediatrician
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
I wouldn't rely on my parents for anything remotely related to
computers in a thousand years. It took me four years to teach one
of them how to check the email, and after four months or so, their
Yahoo email account expired because they haven't checked it for too
long.
Thank goodness my wife is a computer programmer. I'll depend on her to spread the word.
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge
3012 posts
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Registered:
Feb 15th 2005
In the beginning, my dad would have my mom print out the emails, and
he'd read them and then handwrite replies for her to type up and send
out. My mom got sick of this really quickly, and then made him
learn how to do it himself... but it took a long time. He can do
it now, but if anything goes wrong (like if a window pops up or a
disappears) he has no idea what to do. It's as if the computer is
completely unintuitive for him.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by Gorbachev on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 8:01am
1569 posts
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Registered:
Dec 1st 2002
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Apparently my girlfriend had come browsing here and one or two other sites I frequent when I was hospitalized for a week and she wasn't able to see me. Something to remind her of me, I would imagine if I 'snuffed it' she might go and post about it.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by (-[PREDATOR]-) on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 3:04pm
65 posts
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Registered:
Aug 5th 2004
Occupation: Student
Location: Koszalin, Poland (Polska)
Maybe everyone from Snarkpit should write testimony, where will be
wrote "Write a post in website "www.snarkpit.net" in General Banter
Forum that I'm dead. Delete my all e-mail accounts e.t.c. ...". I have
never imaginated my friends and family reaction after my death as I
can't imagine "live" (what happen) after I will die.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by LAzerMANiac on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 3:45pm
204 posts
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Registered:
Sep 30th 2003
Occupation: A student/mapper for Xen Rebels
Location: Fremont, CA
In case something happens to me, I'd probably ask one of my relatives to send everyone on my contact list an Email, IM or a forum post about whatever has happened.
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by satchmo on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 4:58pm
satchmo
member
2077 posts
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Registered:
Nov 24th 2004
Occupation: pediatrician
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
The problem is...do your relatives and family member know all of your online haunts?
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by satchmo on
Fri Dec 16th 2005 at 11:22pm
Posted
2005-12-16 11:22pm
satchmo
member
2077 posts
1809 snarkmarks
Registered:
Nov 24th 2004
Occupation: pediatrician
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
I think you have to tell them explicitly. When you die, they're going to be preoccupied with grief, planning for funeral, and dealing with regret and depression. I don't expect them to think of an online forum.
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge
Posted
2005-12-17 12:20am
3012 posts
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Registered:
Feb 15th 2005
Yeah, wasn't that about some project lead or webmaster whose sight was hacked?
Re: It's Good to be Missed
Posted by satchmo on
Sat Dec 17th 2005 at 12:25am
Posted
2005-12-17 12:25am
satchmo
member
2077 posts
1809 snarkmarks
Registered:
Nov 24th 2004
Occupation: pediatrician
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
I know your family members probably don't care, but I am sure you do. Don't you want us to know what happened once you're gone?
And if you care, I am sure your family members would care too, knowing that you care. But they probably don't know that you care, unless you tell them that you care.
And if that's not convoluted enough, you can do the chicken dance now.
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge