Why Tweeting Quotes is a Waste of Time

Quotations and aphorisms are generally just verbal Christmas presents; enticingly done up in pretty paper and ribbons, but once you get them open they generally turn out to be just socks. Tom Holt (2007)

I frequently have a rant about the uselessness of quotes on Twitter. Not ‘quotes ON Twitter’ as in “He who tweeteth quotes shall be deemed as wise as the person he tweeteth” because that’s just silly and most of the people who are quoted were dead many hundreds of years before Twitter came into being.

There is nothing so ridiculous but some philosopher has said it. Cicero (106-43 BC)

No, I mean the endless, indiscriminate parade of stuff that is so saccharin it makes you want to throw up, has no interest or meaning for most of the people who receive it and in many cases is just bullshit.

Some recent examples are “Thoughts become things so choose the good ones.” This is an example of such sloppy thinking that I’d like to slap the originator but instead devoted a separate post to it.

She had a pretty gift for quotation, which is a serviceable substitute for wit…W. Somerset Maugham (1926)

The next one was something along the lines of “Before starting a journey don’t ask advice of someone who has never left home”. Now, I get the idea of this but, you know, there are circumstances when the person who has never left home might be exactly the right person to ask. They may have studied the place you’re going to or they may have the best maps. Hell, they might have invented Google Earth! Does anyone really believe that the only person to consult on anything is someone who has had personal experience of it? (Pause until the screams of many coaches has died down). Frankly, I’d rather consult a doctor who is healthy than one who has the same illness as me.

At all events, the next best thing to being witty one’s self, is to be able to quote another’s wit. Christopher N. Bovee (1857)

Another was “The person who wants to demolish a mountain starts by moving a few stones.” You know what? If I wanted to demolish a mountain I’d hire a bulldozer. Even taking it literally, if I had a job that seemed insurmountable, I’d get help. Wrapping things up in allusions and metaphore doesn’t necessarily make them more powerful.

In a pinch, any orphan quote can be called a Chinese proverb. Ralph Keyes, “Nice Guys Finish Seventh”:

Then there was a quote from Einstein. Now Einstein was a great scientist but deeply flawed in other respects. He was widely regarded as oversexed, immature and lousy at sustaining meaningful relationships so forgive me if I don’t follow his advice unless it’s directly related to science.

Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else’s opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation. Oscar Wilde (1905)

Quotations can be used to great effect when used in articles or essays. They serve as really good hooks or attention-grabbers and can give emphasis to a particular point but on their own, with no reference point to their significance, they are just brain fluff.

Given all this, why do people feel compelled to share a quote, apropos of nothing, with their whole list of contacts?

Famous dead people make excellent commentators on current events. Ralph Keyes, “Nice Guys Finish Seventh”

I guess its because something in that quote spoke to them, which means that they probably need to take action on something that’s happening in their lives. It most likely doesn’t have any significance to anyone else unless they are sharing the same issues.

The great writers of aphorisms read as if they had all known each other very well. Elias Canetti (1942–1972)

What would be interesting would be to hear what folk did as a result of reading a quote but sadly, I expect the answer would be not a lot except nod wisely and pass it on.

Meanwhile nothing changes. Its thinking for ourselves AND TAKING ACTION that changes things not taking someone else’s thinking and believing it can change anything.

Immortality. I notice that as soon as writers broach this question they begin to quote. I hate quotation. Tell me what you know. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Journals (May 1849)

11 comments
Bernie J Mitchell
Bernie J Mitchell

Whatever you do, always give 100 percent. Unless you're donating blood. ;-)

Jon Green
Jon Green

"Frankly, I’d rather consult a doctor who is healthy than one who has the same illness as me."

 

Actually, I have the exact opposite view.  I get migraines - and I'm so lucky that my neurologist gets precisely the same type! He has a VERY vested interest in being up-to-date with the latest research and treatments, and tries them on himself first.  I literally couldn't get better treatment than that!

 

It's the corollary of "Physician, cure thyself!" - in an age when at last they can.

Ann
Ann

Edit it? It should be tied with ribbons and paraded in an open car through the streets! #noshitsherlock is the perfect response to sloppy thinking, lazy tweeting and brain fluff. Go, Max go!

Max
Max

Thanks for this link again Ann to give me another giggle. I really hate this guff too. I mean, it's hardly likely that Twitter is going to have an uncomfortable silence is it? But in terms of ranking the #crapquotes for crappiness at least the famous and dead have earned some respect somewhere along the line to be quoted whereas the leadership/HR/motivational gurus are the ones that do my head in and I have been so tempted to reply with #noshitsherlock :) PS - If you edit my comments I will totally understand

Carl Ingalls
Carl Ingalls

Ann, Thank you for a wonderfully written article. I feel like quoting you already. Carl Ingalls

Ann
Ann

Ah, then we'd be in danger of getting into the mobius strip club of quotes and there may be no escape!

Ann
Ann

Just Google 'quotations' Max and you'll get loads of them. You can even install them on your website and piss off all your potential customers!

Max
Max

What I want to know is which website is the source of all this "brain fluff" ... everyone must be going to the same place.

Ann
Ann

Thanks Roberta - you're sooo right. And don't get me started on The Secret or I'll have to have another rant!

Roberta Ward
Roberta Ward like.author.displayName 1 Like

oooo, I love that last comment.Taking action is key to anything really.Sitting around wishing for something aint gonna make it happen no matter how much you believe in Law Of Attraction ;-) Get off ya bum and do something, thats how it works, not rocket science.

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