I'd say a third of the time. I catch myself writing and revealing too much.
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I get pretty terrified of people attacking me for saying something wrong, so I tend to delete something I was about to say. I don't exactly have the greatest way with words, so an anonymous post where no one knows I'm not trying to be a jerk can be a bit difficult to handle.
Whenever I have a train of thought that suddenly stops and I don't want to spend time thinking how to finish the message
I used to do it a lot.
Typically this would be responding to someone being provocative.
I decided that they were angry people just trying to make other people angry.
So now I write articles mocking them.
I am much more relaxed now.
I still catch myself in the process of replying to someone who is Wrong On The Internet, but for the most part I just let it go. It still bothers me, but I've accepted that nothing I say on a webforum is going to change any hearts or minds. Nowadays I mostly post to try and give people a cheap laugh.
I do it sometimes, when I realise midway that I was wrong/don't care enough (usually when I feel that someone hasn't done enough research, but I should likely tell them that instead of just stopping my reply).
Less now that I've learned to give up before I start.
All the time. I could have typed a multi-paragraph masterpiece but then I realise I can't be bothered offering help in a world full of people that know everything about everything and are never wrong.
Something akin to 10% of unwritten comments here. 5% are shared between cases when I write it for too long and still can't see it as a complete thought, or when I get distracted half-way through and can't care to continue. Other 5% is my stupid phone optimi... pushing apps from memory when I switch to something else (even if it's for fact-checking this exact comment), so I lose whatever I wrote and the thread itself.
Maybe one in 20 or so, mostly I've realized I misread the comment, or I just don't really feel like arguing any more.
All the time but not as often as I should.
You gotta pick your battles.
I'd say I post about 1/30 responses I make.
Do you write a lot of responses, or just do a low amount of bailing?
I find people online tend to have a lot more passion for arguing than I do so I often rethink posting any responses I come up with.
This is what I hate the most about the practice of using a very "scorched earth" style of rhetoric focused on shaming and berating and making things uncomfortable for opponents. There's probably a lot of people with objections but they just don't feel like dealing with that stuff so they don't say anything.
i do this increasingly often lately.
Yesn't
Often.
I can't think of a single time I've-
Rough estimate, 30%. Either because my point ended up not being worth making, I ended up being wrong, or the message was dumped at some point between switching through 4 apps and 12 websites gathering information and I can't be arsed to write 400 words again.
One in five, I'll guess. I am prone to TMI, not as much intimate sharing as wanting to write about things that are too far remotely related.
I'm also prone to seguing into a rant as I have much to say I wish were said more often. Sometimes I edit those out. Sometimes I mark them as rants.
And then I am prone to mobile keyboard fatigue, and will wear out if a short explanation won't do. I get back to it at a proper keyboard less often than I don't.
Increasingly more often in the last year or two. Makes social media use for me a lot more pleasant. But sometime I still can't resist.
Can't put a number on it, but I'd wager it happens the majority of the time
I wish more people on Lemmy and everywhere else were like you.