Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Posts. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Posts Quotes And Sayings by 98 Authors including Wim Wenders,Kilroy J. Oldster,Krist Novoselic,Heather Briggs,William Carlos Williams for you to enjoy and share.
the more opinions you have, the less you see
Many life-affirming questions lead to an endless spool of disconcerting propositions and contradictory conclusions, and even more troubling, some queries prove unanswerable.
I wanted to stimulate thought instead of throwing things out or try to give a perspective. I just put stuff up and it's up for two or three weeks and I get tired of it, so I take it down and put something else up.
I write there for I promote!
There is no comment on pictures but pictures, on music but music, on poems but poetry. If you do, you do. If you don't, you don't. And that's all there is to that.
Think of these pages as graffiti maybe, and where I have scratched up in a public place my longings and loves, my grievances and indecencies, be reminded in private of your own. In that way, at least, we can hold a kind of converse.
This your brain. This is your brain on Facebook. Any questions?
Silence gives answers.
Working with the morning pages, we begin to sort through the differences between our real feelings, which are often secret, and our official feelings, those on the record for public display.
What I love about the Internet and what I try to do on the issues is insist upon the ability to have bad taste if one wants.
I am deliriously in love with GIF reviews. That is all.
I'm terrible at posting regularly; I don't deserve the blog success!
I tried to use the questions and answers as an armature on which to build a sculpture of genuine conversation.
Great content inspires action.
A newspaper runs a story, a friend posts a link on Facebook, a blogger writes a post, and it's interesting. But the real intellectual action often takes place in the comments.
This is the perfect place for insight, for a person to become somebody better.
I have absolutely no idea how this site works. But if you're a reader who's interested in my books, I'll answer any questions you have.
stuff and nonsense
You need interesting content that entertains or informs - preferably both. You want people to look forward to your posts and come back for more. People want to follow you. They want to hear your words and see your vision.
Comments outnumber ideas.
What is important is the reliability of my posts being there to greet my fans with a smile or a giggle every morning. That's how we keep on growing.
Questions and answers is a big space, and there are lots of possible systems that you can create for different goals.
I try and write honestly about what I see around me now.
Speaking to bloggers on a daily basis.
I wanted to create an environment in which more than just personal essays could be represented, and in which stranger approaches to making essays could be celebrated.
The great systems that inform the world about the truth and life invariably claim to be absolutely truthful and well-balanced. In reality they are quaking bridges built out of yearning.
The blogosphere rewards no-holds-barred smartassery.
Opinion-sharing sessions are like junk food: they fill you up with starch and leave you feeling both sated and hungry. A sustained inquiry into the truth of a matter is an almost athletic experience; it may exhaust you, but it also improves you.
The 24/7 nature of online debate, on the web and across social media, has allowed for more vibrant discussion of the opinions we publish - and your own.
I try with my pictures to raise a question, to provoke a debate, so that we can discuss problems together and come up with solutions.
Moderation kills.
Indentations on the page, words, my friends, and I will share them with you.
My approach to creating content is focused on pulling people out of their intellectual comfort zones. I'm interested in presenting ideas in unique ways that challenge people to question their assumptions.
Posting something that is encouraging and well done compared to something that is trashy and common is the difference between eating a fine meal or the scraps from making that meal.
Reps, reps, reps
Many like to ask the questions; few like to hear the answers.
I try to make things interesting and thought-provoking.
The age of the Internet, it is said, is the age of the self and the selfie. The world is full of people full of themselves. In such an age, I post, therefore I am.
I like to write about things about which I have no answers, questions that trouble me. These things trouble me.
Whatever you come across- go beyond
Questions open the mind; answers shut it down.
I remember writing the post but not what I said specifically, so I'll either repeat myself or say something completely different and baffle everybody.
According to one critic, my works looked like scraped billboards. I went to look at the billboards and decided that more billboards should be scraped.
One of the objects of a newspaper is to understand popular feeling and to give expression to it; another is to arouse among the people certain desirable sentiments; and the third is fearlessly to expose popular defects.
While I have devised various formal strategies for articulating [my] concerns, I think fundamentally the work is driven by a basic curiosity. I seek to find out things about people by making photographs of them.
I want to speak, show, see, and hear outrageously astute questions and comments. I want to be on the sides of pleasure and laughter and to disrupt the dour certainties of pictures, property, and power.
There's a village in my computer - friends, fans, readers, and colleagues. It's a populous, sometimes chaotic little burg always bustling with news, gossip, opinions and potential excitement.
Not many people read my stuff, but I really like the ones that do.
I guess I'm entertaining; I guess I'm interesting. I guess the things that I say sell papers. I guess they sell magazines. I don't know.
People got so many questions. Why you got so many questions when my whole life is on the Internet? If you wanna know about me, you can go on the Internet and look at my YouTube videos. I used to drop one every day. You can go on my YouTube channel, go on my Vine, my Twitter.
Questions outlive the answers.
Why can't somebody give us a list of things everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of the things that everybody says but nobody thinks?
I am one thing, my writings are another.
Posting information is like pornography, a slick, impersonal exhibition.
Everyone has the answers.
[In a blogosphere] everybody has an opinion now, but I don't really freaking care about - all opinions ain't created equal, because everybody can go out there and express themselves and hide behind some character we don't know who you really are, a bunch of cowards.
On any given day, I'm likely to be working at home, hunched over this keyboard, typing Great Thoughts and Beautiful Sentences - or so they seem at the time, like those beautifully flecked and iridescent stones one finds at the seashore that gradually dry into dull gray pebbles.
It always felt good typing up a review on a book I enjoyed and I went all out, finding bizarre pictures to emphasis the wow factor. I preffered ones with cute kittens and llamas. And Dean Winchester. Hitting 'publish post' cracked a smile.
Your job is to give people a reason to keep reading.
Gone are the days when you simply write a jolly good book and wait for the queues to form. Readers need to be friended, darling. They need to be subscribers. They need to be followers.
Live the questions now
I write best about two things, which is evident from the cover of So Far Gone: the constant quest to understand love and money.
I like Q&A's better than articles sometimes because I feel like I'd rather hear somebody actually talk or wrestle with ...
Facebook, instagram - I prefer visual communication better than verbal. But I read all the comments, answering too.
What are you reading for?
today, our social media experiences are designed in a way that favors broadcasting over engagements, posts over discussions, shallow comments over deep conversations.
One can get closer to reality and the facts by using words, questions and answers.
Questions that require answers are what keep readers going - and the place to start raising those questions is with your very first sentence.
Readers are Leaders
I write about the things that haunt or obsess me.
Authors need readers and not followers. Authors need review and not Likes!
It's a great medium for trivia and hobbies, but not the place for reasoned, reflective judgment. Suprisingly often, discussions degenerate into acrimony, insults and flames.
It was one of those evenings when men feel that truth, goodness and beauty are one. In the morning, when they commit their discovery to paper, when others read it written there, it looks wholly ridiculous.
Lot's and lot's I am a proud man having so many fans of my work: (Paintings and films)
My works were designed to amuse, annoy, bewilder, mystify and inspire reflection.
I'm young, and I'm a girl, so, when I post something, I want to see what people are saying or what they think of my photos. I've found it better if you don't read anything and you just always stay off that track.
When in doubt, don't post.
I like to share my thoughts after watching/reading or listening to something... after all you could get with amazing thoughts.
There are so many questions to be answered and so many personal compliments that we appreciate so very much.
My blog readership grew steadily as I started to dump more of my inner self onto the page. I
Just keep filling up the pages.
More likely a question than an answer these here all what I have written.
There is an overwhelming amount of information available to us all on the web each day, not to mention what is shared with us by our family, friends, fans, and followers. This necessitates the need to filter through all that information and to decide for ourselves where to put our attention.
I visited blathernodes, soaked myself in other people's opinions.
I think, therefore I spam.
The things I write about are the things that I am passionate about, interested in, and fighting for in my life.
We who curate our Twitter feeds and Facebook walls understand that at least part of what we're doing publicly, 'like'-ing what we like, is trying to separate ourselves from the herd.
Personal answers to ultimate questions. That is what we seek.
Answer all the questions. Question all the answers.
There's a lot of social input when you put these things out there. People's ideas cross with other people's thoughts.
Sometimes you want to read what people write about you, obviously.
There's information about everything from poetry to
pills, from picture frames to pyramids, and from pudding to psychology
and that's just in the P aisle,
which we're walking down right now.
Every post is a digital tattoo of your personal brand.
Every post you make is a marketing piece.
Whether you realize it or not and regardless of having something for sale.
Every post is a digital tattoo of your personal brand.
Associated Press | 777 words
You write about what you love and you write about things you're trying to make sense of.
THE END OF PART ONE
bringing attention
I discovered that funny animal pictures - memes - would get a lot of likes and shares.
I just believe that whatever I post should be my content.
Today, we need to listen more carefully. I read what people say on Twitter, my friends on Path, in addition to formal media. I look for patterns, and then I post questions back to my network.