To be or not to be... That is the question.
Imagine if that was the end of the text, wouldn't that just be frustrating?
That would be pretty useless wouldn't it? You'd be anoyed.
After all, you did go through all that hard work of pressing the mouse-button
one time after searching for a good text, and sumbled upon mine.
Coincidence?
Now you're thinking "Oh no, not one of these texts again!" But oh yes, "one more".
Not that it really matters, I got your attention now didn't I?
Then again, you could just stop reading here...
But you choose not to... You feel like you would be missing out on something, and spend some time after thinking "Maybee i should have kept reading after all."
By then, you will almost have become obsessed with this text that, "You didn't finish".
You will then continue to wonder "What was in that text?"
But, if you're still reading, or have come back to this very text, then you must be waiting and wanting for some sort of conclusion.
Some sort of ending that ties the beginning together with the end.
An ending that brings a message or a deep thought twister. Because you want something to really think about and "figure out".
Like a puzzle...
Are you still with me? -Good...
Then we can continue this conversation where I am doing all the talking and you're just taking in all that is written.
Perhaps you are starting to say what you think out loud, as if I am real and speaking right infront of you.
This is where you realise that if you have been "thinking out loud" you have been talking to yourself, or the screen.
Now you feel like this text is getting stranger and stranger, but you sort of like it that way, it's like the text is speaking directly to you. Not just another text about nothing, and you feel like it really does have a deeper meaning to it.
But then again, this text is pointless, and just one out of millions.
And yet you, ended up reading this one.
Small world isn't it.
Now, if you're still here ofcourse, comes the conclusion you've been expecting all along;
To be or not to be, that is the question...
-Daniel Hammerin