Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Forum Pet Peeves


sariesue

Recommended Posts

domesticactivist Collaborator

I hate when people apologize for writing too much. To really give a good answer, we need *information*! If I don't have time to read something long, I just won't read it. No one is forcing me! When I read what others have written, I get something out of it.

I agree with the others who have a problem with people asking questions then not coming back with answers to follow up questions or updates to really difficult situations.

Something that bothers me about this forum in particular are the board rules about not linking to blog posts. The same issues come up over and over and I sometimes *really* want to share the same information that I've shared before. I've written blog posts so that I don't have to rewrite up all that same stuff. It's very silly to have to type out to search the blog linked from my profile instead of just linking to it. Same deal with not being able to link to ahem, sites that sell things. It's obvious when someone is a spam poster who is just here to promote their blog or make money on their affiliate links. It seems petty and greedy to not allow regular members of the community to link to their own blog posts that are directly relevant to the topic at hand.

I also hate when people get all bent out of shape about people's typos, spelling, or grammar mistakes. I get not wanting to read big blocks of text-speak or all caps. However, jumping on people for using the wrong "there," is off topic and mean.

Last one... I think someone said it already... is when people bury a completely new and unrelated question in the middle of someone's thread. It confuses the whole thing and makes them less likely to get good answers.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • Replies 101
  • Created
  • Last Reply
sariesue Explorer

I also hate when people get all bent out of shape about people's typos, spelling, or grammar mistakes. I get not wanting to read big blocks of text-speak or all caps. However, jumping on people for using the wrong "there," is off topic and mean.

Multiple spelling mistakes bother me because all of the main web browsers that I know of correct spelling mistakes when posting on the internet. It is extreme laziness to not look for the red lines and have the word corrected. For me why should I spend my precious time to respond to a post that has a million spelling errors because the OP was too lazy to proofread? Plus having many spelling errors in one post makes it very hard for me to read.

This reminds me of another pet peeve, when people use IM lingo as the main format of their posts. I have no problem with shortening frequently used forum words like gluten free-gluten-free, medications-meds, doctors-drs...... But posts should not read like "does ne1 kno about the blood tests? I cud rlly use the help... GTG BAI!" Since there is no character limit to posts and it's not meant to be instant communication why can't people take the time to write properly?

love2travel Mentor

I'm here to peeve! Celiac's disease or celiacs disease. AUUUUGHH! IT'S NOT PLURAL AND IT'S NOT POSSESSIVE!

Thank you. I feel much better. :ph34r:

I am RELIEVED that you mentioned this as I was going to do the very same thing. :D I feel better, too.

domesticactivist Collaborator

Multiple spelling mistakes bother me because all of the main web browsers that I know of correct spelling mistakes when posting on the internet. It is extreme laziness to not look for the red lines and have the word corrected. For me why should I spend my precious time to respond to a post that has a million spelling errors because the OP was too lazy to proofread? Plus having many spelling errors in one post makes it very hard for me to read.

This reminds me of another pet peeve, when people use IM lingo as the main format of their posts. I have no problem with shortening frequently used forum words like gluten free-gluten-free, medications-meds, doctors-drs...... But posts should not read like "does ne1 kno about the blood tests? I cud rlly use the help... GTG BAI!" Since there is no character limit to posts and it's not meant to be instant communication why can't people take the time to write properly?

I agree with the IM lingo thing but must say I post from my phone all the time and autocorrect is evil!

Roda Rising Star

Hey, can someone tell me how they really feel? :huh::rolleyes::P

Booghead Contributor

Love this forum. I also hate it when someone posts a frantic post about how they are feeling so very terrible and going to the hospital the next day. Then the next day we check for a update. Then the next week. And we never here from them.

So then we read their profiles and their IP address. We find where they live.

THEN we check the obituaries in that city, state, country.

Only to find out that they were just fine, it was a mild allergic reaction to peanuts. The don't have celiacs. They were just fine.

<i'm so funny and clever>

So all in all my pet peeve is when people don't update us. B)

Lisa Mentor

<i'm so funny and clever>

B)

Clever, indeed! B) And, I too agree. :)

But, I also respect the fact that people use user names to protect their identity. It's nice to respect their privacy, too. ;):D


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ravenwoodglass Mentor

So then we read their profiles and their IP address. We find where they live.

This has me a bit concerned. I do value my privacy. If I want folks to know where I live I will tell them. The idea that someone can find where I live is a bit worrisome. :unsure:

I guess that is now my biggest pet peeve and will be something I am going to have to take into serious consideration.

psawyer Proficient

This has me a bit concerned. I do value my privacy. If I want folks to know where I live I will tell them. The idea that someone can find where I live is a bit worrisome. :unsure:

I guess that is now my biggest pet peeve and will be something I am going to have to take into serious consideration.

Forum members can not see IP addresses, nor can they see the private information in member profiles. Moderators can see the IP address from which a post came.

Jestgar Rising Star

Just want to clarify that the IP address is not your address. It's the location of the company that provides your internet. When I look up my IP address I get this:

Continent: North America (NA)

Country: United States (US)

State: Washington

City: Everett

Postal Code: 98201

ISP: Comcast Cable

Organization: Comcast Cable

Time zone: America/Los_Angeles

Which isn't where I live. Not even the right county...

Booghead Contributor

WOAH WOAH WOAH! Guys I was just kidding. It was a joke. Sorry to get you all riled up! Unless you have very high tech stuffies then you cant find other peoples IP addresses. And on this protected forum you might not be able to do it at all. It was a very illogical story, meant to exageratte how we feel when people don't keep us updated. B)

Booghead Contributor

This has me a bit concerned. I do value my privacy. If I want folks to know where I live I will tell them. The idea that someone can find where I live is a bit worrisome. :unsure:

I guess that is now my biggest pet peeve and will be something I am going to have to take into serious consideration.

It can't happen. Don't worry about it. I was just kidding. I suppose I should have considered not everyone knows about tech stuff. My dad is a computer "genius" so I know more then most I suppose.

Lisa Mentor

WOAH WOAH WOAH! Guys I was just kidding. It was a joke. Sorry to get you all riled up! Unless you have very high tech stuffies then you cant find other peoples IP addresses. And on this protected forum you might not be able to do it at all. It was a very illogical story, meant to exageratte how we feel when people don't keep us updated. B)

B) Cool! :D

ravenwoodglass Mentor

It can't happen. Don't worry about it. I was just kidding. I suppose I should have considered not everyone knows about tech stuff. My dad is a computer "genius" so I know more then most I suppose.

No harm done.

Maybe use a 'smily face' or the 'LOL' one after a kidding remark like that so us 'tech challenged' that aren't as tech savvy know your kidding. :D

anabananakins Explorer

It's a valid point though, about the worrying. And my peeve! On another forum I belong to we had a person post all the time, and we were all good friends and then one day she vanished. She completely dropped off the face of the earth (she'd posted elsewhere in the fandom, so it wasn't just she'd vanished from us). It was really weird and we all wondered "did she just get bored of it all" (if so, say so!), "did something happen"? We were worried and we missed her but time passed (I've known them all for about 5 years now, in real life as well as keeping in regular contact via our online group) and we'd mention her now and again, pretty much convinced she was dead. Then one day, she turned up! There was activity on her blog, which triggered emails. And we were all "hi!" and she ignored us. Then she turned up elsewhere asking insane, very troll-like questions. It was so weird. Over a period of a few weeks she came back into our lives only to crash and burn in spectacular fashion after some utterly insane posting around the place. She ended up deleting all her accounts, so I think she's gone once and for all and we never got to see our 'friend' again, just the psycho she ended up being. But hey, we got resolution at least. She wasn't dead, she was just nuts :)

So it doesn't really apply here, since the nature of this forum is quite different to the small close-knit group, but people do worry when someone they see all the time, vanishes!

kareng Grand Master

I hate the public forums that make you use your real full name and email address. I signed up for one even tho I was a bit uncomfortable. 2 days later, I got an email from someone complaining about everyone on the forum. I shut that account down.

jerseyangel Proficient

I was a member of a forum once that kept trying to solicit money to keep the board running. This was a large site with a lot of advertising too.

Lisa Mentor

You're right Anabanana...we learn to share with people and care with people. It can worry us or concern us about the people we share information about, and offer help...and we just don't hear back. :huh:

I'm learning that's the way of the internet. We like to think that people have manners, but I guess, sometimes they just don't. B)

mushroom Proficient

I was a member of a forum once that kept trying to solicit money to keep the board running. This was a large site with a lot of advertising too.

I belong to a forum where there is no advertising, and we do ocasionally contribute to keep it running although we are not very active at the moment. When the America's Cup is on we go nutz :D I have met lots of follks from the phorum (at least half a dozen) and it has been fun over the years. I always recognized them even though I hadn't seen pictures, except for one. :rolleyes:

UKGail Rookie

Picking up on a previous point about posters eliciting advice and then disappearing without coming back with updated information, I'm afraid I have been guilty of that. Maybe I am just paranoid but I had a rather uncomfortable experience and have been upset about it. Having had negative blood tests, and having more or less ruled out any other major "nasties", I showed my doctor a reported case history identical to my unusual atypical presentation of celiac/gluten intolerance. As I also have many of the other more typical sypmtoms discussed here on the forum, plus a strong family history of diagnosed celiac disease, I thought this was good enough to elicit a referral for an endoscopy. Instead the Doc said "ok, that's good enough for me - seronegative celiac", jotted it down in my file and instructed me to go on a strict gluten-free diet. I was a bit surprised but pleased, thought this was an agreed diagnosis, and started on the diet with unmistakeably positive results. On reading someone's post about achieving a diagnosis with negative bloods, I responded explaining my experience. The poster asked for my docs name, which foolishly I gave, if only to discourage the poster because I am in the UK.

Anyway at my follow up visit a few weeks later, when I was discussing my response to the gluten-free diet, the doc was surprisingly neutral, and seemed quite keen to say that he was not giving me a diagnosis, and that I had merely agreed to trial a gluten-free diet. I was (and am) upset at this because I have now missed my opportunity to obtain a formal diagnosis as I do not wish to do a lengthy gluten challenge and make myself sick again (I was hardly functioning either at home or at work because of the pain, sickness and brain fog etc). It was also so strange that his approach was so markedly different, that it made me wonder if my post was picked up by a reputation monitoring program. So now, I feel stupid, embarrassed at my naivity in all senses, still quite angry, and not able to continue posting. I have still been reading the board though, and find it a great help, particularly on the not-so-good days. So thank you all!

bartfull Rising Star

I think ALL of us who post on the internet, no matter where we post, need to be a bit more careful. I was just on one of my guitar forums a few minutes ago and they were talking about a very rare guitar. Some guy actually posted a list of all the people he knew who had one. Now all of these people have to get burgler alarms because it is so easy to find people, once again, using the internet. If someone wants to steal one of these babies, it will be so easy now. :angry:

I think sometimes we forget that it is not just our group we are talking to. Anyone who owns a computer can read anything we post. I try to keep that in mind at all times, but I am sure I have had some "mishaps" too. I try to think of it as a "party line". Anyone here old enough to remember those?

mushroom Proficient

I think sometimes we forget that it is not just our group we are talking to. Anyone who owns a computer can read anything we post. I try to keep that in mind at all times, but I am sure I have had some "mishaps" too. I try to think of it as a "party line". Anyone here old enough to remember those?

Ah yes. Our little country school - board members would all pick up the phone at 7:00 p.m. and hold the board meeting. :D

You have highlighted a danger I hadn't thought of - not what we post ourselves but what other people post about us :unsure:

pondy Contributor

How about when someone highjacks your post & really just starts a new thread right in the middle?

Lisa Mentor

How about when someone highjacks your post & really just starts a new thread right in the middle?

Oh yes, not very polite. B)

mushroom Proficient

I give a little leeway here, because I think I did the same thing when I joined :unsure: Didn't know the forum etiquette to start your own darned thread and not take over someone else's. It seems (when you're really new) very presumptuous and uppity to start a whole thread devoted just to you :rolleyes: The only forums I had been on before were more like chatrooms....

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Kirita replied to Kirita's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      2

      Recovery from gluten challenge

    2. - Scott Adams replied to Kirita's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      2

      Recovery from gluten challenge

    3. - Scott Adams replied to Colleen H's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      1

      Brain fog

    4. - trents replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      2

      Feel like I’m starting over

    5. - cristiana replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      2

      Feel like I’m starting over


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,281
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    newlife213
    Newest Member
    newlife213
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Kirita
      Thank you so much for your response! I have a follow-up appointment with her pediatrician next week, and also an appointment with her pediatric GI Dr. Your message gives me some ideas for questions to ask the doctors. My daughter went strictly gluten-free in January following her first endoscopy so I’m guessing her diet is pretty solid. She is compliant but also reliant on others to make her food (at school and home) but she didn’t have this problem prior to the gluten challenge when she went strictly gluten-free. It really makes sense to me that the gluten challenge inflammation hasn’t healed and I will be asking her doctors about nutritional issues. I ask for anecdotal stories because the research surrounding the gluten challenge seems to be inconsistent and inconclusive (at least what I’ve been able to find!). Thank you so much for your response!
    • Scott Adams
      While the positive endoscopy confirms the diagnosis, it's important to be skeptical of the idea that your daughter will simply "bounce back" to a pre-challenge state. The gluten challenge was essentially a controlled, prolonged exposure that likely caused significant inflammation and damage to her system; it's not surprising that recovery is slow and that a subsequent exposure hit her so hard. The persistent fatigue is a major red flag that her body is still struggling, potentially indicating that the initial damage hasn't fully healed or that her system is now in a heightened state of reactivity. Rather than seeking anecdotal timelines from others, her experience underscores the critical need for close follow-up with her gastroenterologist to rule out other nutrient deficiencies commonly caused by celiac flare-ups, like iron or B12, and to consult with a dietitian to scrutinize her diet for any hidden sources of cross-contamination that could be perpetuating her symptoms. The most common nutrient deficiencies associated with celiac disease that may lead to testing for the condition include iron, vitamin D, folate (vitamin B9), vitamin B12, calcium, zinc, and magnesium.  Unfortunately many doctors, including my own doctor at the time, don't do extensive follow up testing for a broad range of nutrient deficiencies, nor recommend that those just diagnosed with celiac disease take a broad spectrum vitamin/mineral supplement, which would greatly benefit most, if not all, newly diagnosed celiacs.      
    • Scott Adams
      The most common nutrient deficiencies associated with celiac disease that may lead to testing for the condition include iron, vitamin D, folate (vitamin B9), vitamin B12, calcium, zinc, and magnesium.  Unfortunately many doctors, including my own doctor at the time, don't do extensive follow up testing for a broad range of nutrient deficiencies, nor recommend that those just diagnosed with celiac disease take a broad spectrum vitamin/mineral supplement, which would greatly benefit most, if not all, newly diagnosed celiacs. Brain fog, like other celiac disease symptoms, does improve after you to 100% gluten-free, and supplementation will also help.      
    • trents
      Were you doing any of the new home construction yourself? Drywall compounds and adhesives used in construction have been known to cause problems for some celiacs.
    • cristiana
      Hello @Scatterbrain and welcome to the forum I am sorry to hear you have had a return of your symptoms.  My first thoughts were that stress can cause IBS-like symptoms - a friend of mine has been suffering a huge amount of stress and when that happens she gets diarrhea.  But you say that you haven't got any bad abdominal issues, so perhaps you could share what other symptoms you are having? Cristiana  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.