• Canadian expert: Those who Instagram food aren't just annoying - they're mentally ill
    47 replies, posted
My stepsister always does this, it's weird as fuck... like a compulsive disorder or something. Can't fucking eat without instagramming the food first.
Some people do it for narcissistic reasons but others do it for weight loss believe it or not.
What about cannibals instagramming people?
[QUOTE=cheetahben;40574483]Instagram is a social network for smartphones that revolves entirely around taking pictures and adding fun filters to them. It's basically a circlejerk of white girls taking pictures of their Starbucks cups.[/QUOTE] Perhaps; Or your personal friends who aren't a 'circlejerk of white girls taking pictures of their Starbucks cups'.
I only take pictures of food I make and think look nice. Although it doesn't usually happen.
Another stupid research? I can come up with this sort of stupid shit too. People who use quarters are more likely pedophiles. That's some quality research right there, definitely gonna hit the newspapers.
[QUOTE=agentalexandre;40573196]Stupidest thing I've heard. My girlfriend does it because she likes the presentation of the food that's before her and she uploads it to instagram to share with her friends: Look how cool this food looks.[/QUOTE] [QUOTE]they may have a psychological problem, says leading psychiatrist[/QUOTE] [QUOTE]they may have a psychological problem[/QUOTE] [QUOTE][B]may[/B][/QUOTE]
Eating disorder? More like frequent Instagram users are under a complex delusion that there are thousands of people out there constantly refreshing their browsers every few seconds in the hope that a new picture of your daily life appears. The whole service is built around the delusional idea that everything you do needs to be photographed, needs to have a cheap filter applied to it, and needs to be spammed to the world.
[QUOTE=DeEz;40575273]maymaymamyamyamy[/QUOTE] Anyone that does anything MAY have a psychological problem, though.
I have a couple pictures of a kumquat and an orange on Instagram...
So... as a "canadian expert", does that make them an expert on canadians or an expert [I]in[/I] canada?
[QUOTE=S31-Syntax;40577603]So... as a "canadian expert", does that make him an expert on canadians or an expert [I]in[/I] canada?[/QUOTE] Her. It makes her, Dr Valerie Taylor, a chief of psychiatry at Women's College Hospital at the University of Toronto.
Psychiatry is a joke nowadays. [editline]9th May 2013[/editline] Also I think being annoyed to the point of actually talking about it by a person who takes a picture and posts it on the internet is more indicative of mental illness
uh oh i took a pic of delicious nachos with it, i'm mentally ill [IMG]http://i.imgur.com/nywE30Q.jpg[/IMG]
[QUOTE=Jocke;40573675]Here it is folks, the answer of all questions[/QUOTE] Indeed, see DSM-V for gems like ODD Oppositional Defiant Disorder (when your kid has tantrums or doesn't obey you) and grief being considered a mental illness.
[QUOTE=mobrockers2;40573158]I only have two or three pictures on instagram, I think two of them are food.[/QUOTE] We're taking you in. Come with us to the asylum.
[QUOTE=matt.ant;40573120][B]'Foodstagrammers' aren't just annoying - they may have a psychological problem, says leading psychiatrist[/B] - Canadian expert says although trend is widespread it may hint at those who suffering with eating disorder [IMG]http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/05/08/article-2321307-19AE3328000005DC-705_468x376.jpg[/IMG] [URL]http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2321307/Foodstagrammers-arent-just-annoying--psychological-problem-says-leading-psychiatrist.html[/URL][/QUOTE] is that a cake with shoelaces
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