Audiofuzzy
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2005
- Messages
- 4,697
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- 152
Babyblue
That is quite a judgemental assumption.....or I shall say you are stereotyping... not all rich people go to cocktail parties and snort cocaine.
No, of course they don't. I did say "fallen celebs" and "rich and BORED".
It worked awesome for me. They gave it to me while I was in the hospital, in the IV dosage form.
Yes, of course.
I am just saying Dilaudid while it works for many,
does not work as wonderful for absolutely everyone.
I know many migraineurs who love what Dilaudid does for their migraine episodes, just saying I am not the lucky one among them
cmdrwhitewolf
Fuzzy, I have a problem with using biographies and statements from the media as a source of evidence for anything.
1) You or other individuals can't easily verify their veracity or truthfulness.
2) Most often, those sources are adulterated with more falsities intended to raise their popularity.
fair enough, however you also can not be totally paranoid and insist everything what they say is totally untrue or altered.
while certain thing indeed might be dramatized, exagerrated or sensationalized,
there is always a seed of truth to them if not a whole truth.
it also depends who writes it, and if biography is authorized or not.
And if the articles you read are not in the Star or Enquirer but serious legitimate magazine or newspaper, there is more probability
the article tries to be objective not sensational or even a pure fantasy.
otherwise, going down this alley we shouldn't believe a word what we read or hear or see in the media about anything - or everything is suspicious,
manipulated, artificially constructed the 'Wag the Dog' way...
indeed, one can go totally paranoid in such world.
Now in the case of autobiography - hands down, you have the thing told as seen thru the eyes of the person itself.
Please don't tell me now for a change that this person can have a "twisted"
view of how the things has happened,
because now you now flat out denying someone who is telling his/her version of what happened their feelings.
It's like saying to a child who is telling you "daddy is hurting me" - "no he is not!".
Plus, most psychologists can't claim they have complete histories, b/c the individual may withhold information. Instead, they have to develop an hypothesis based on their observed evidence, then formulate a treatment plan to try correct the situation.
So? I am not denying that.
Fuzzy