I was thinking what would happen if I started a forum for people seeking absolute perfection in all areas of life.
I am doing this, but at the same time I do not really guilt myself at all when I fall short, which is very often. I'm not sure how many others are like this, but I doubt I'm the only one.
What do you think about this?
itll disappear into obscurity like every other niche forum in existence.
your best bet is starting a new reddit subreddit or something. ie, get your traffic from a place people already gravitate to
I'd join and laugh at everyone who failed miserably like the dumb losers they are.
No but seriously, what's someone who seeks to be perfect doing on r9k? This is the toilet bowl of the internet.
>>35265848
It could work, but the members would have to be very active and involved. Most people who would want to try would be completely overwhelmed if they try to improve everything at once. It also has to be fun enough that people will actually want to go on it and return to it everyday.
>>35266478
(same guy)
But it does sound interesting having a forum where all pursuits of self-improvement are concentrated in one forum, it could work if filled with enough positive thinking people.
can you elaborate on what your idea for hte forum is?
people just asking others, "hey is this perfect yet"?
>>35265848
>perfection in all areas of life
not feasible
a person isn't even capable of perfecting a single aspect of life
the effort required to fail at even one focus means all others atrophy in the meantime
and multitasking means multifailing anyway
perfection is a meme and a bad one
Yeah I said forum cuz that's the ideal in terms of community/entertainment but a subreddit would be better. My goal with it is just to make me improve faster, and I feel like a lot of people may want a place to talk about their goals and such without coming off as self absorbed.
>>35266537
I'm not sure, I haven't thought much about this at all. Maybe hobbies, career, relationships would be some categories.
>>35266591
Obviously not feasible. Mastery would be a better term.
>>35266630
You should probably shift the focus from "perfection" to "improvement", since perfection is obviously impossible. Otherwise, it sounds like it could be a useful place for people to share their experiences in improving themselves, giving each other advice, and in general talk about stuff they're improving themselves on.