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<blockquote data-quote="Lil" data-source="post: 740728" data-attributes="member: 17309"><p>I have a friend who has a page for her dog and a friend who had one for her cat - until he passed. The dog friend doesn't really post anything...she did for a few and it was cute. Usually funny dog videos or pics of him. The cat friend occasionally posted as her cat while he was living and it was always funny little cat things; maybe a photo of the cat next to an empty food bowl with "Louie" complaining about not being fed on demand when he was nice enough to wake her up at 5 a.m., that kind of thing. All in good fun.</p><p></p><p>I've seen those over the top birthday greetings - 99.9% of the time for people who aren't on Facebook. I never really know what to think of them. I must admit, I've wished my parent's happy birthday - and they're dead - but mine are more, "Mom would have been 90 today. I miss her. Happy birthday Mom." type things. More an acknowledgement of the day. I usually get responses from family and friends who knew her, sharing memories. Those are nice. </p><p></p><p>I'd never post the elaborate birthday greetings to elderly people who aren't on line though. That is just weird. But lots of people do it.</p><p></p><p>I'd rather see those than all the political bashing. I've had to "snooze" more than one friend lately because I just couldn't take anymore!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lil, post: 740728, member: 17309"] I have a friend who has a page for her dog and a friend who had one for her cat - until he passed. The dog friend doesn't really post anything...she did for a few and it was cute. Usually funny dog videos or pics of him. The cat friend occasionally posted as her cat while he was living and it was always funny little cat things; maybe a photo of the cat next to an empty food bowl with "Louie" complaining about not being fed on demand when he was nice enough to wake her up at 5 a.m., that kind of thing. All in good fun. I've seen those over the top birthday greetings - 99.9% of the time for people who aren't on Facebook. I never really know what to think of them. I must admit, I've wished my parent's happy birthday - and they're dead - but mine are more, "Mom would have been 90 today. I miss her. Happy birthday Mom." type things. More an acknowledgement of the day. I usually get responses from family and friends who knew her, sharing memories. Those are nice. I'd never post the elaborate birthday greetings to elderly people who aren't on line though. That is just weird. But lots of people do it. I'd rather see those than all the political bashing. I've had to "snooze" more than one friend lately because I just couldn't take anymore! [/QUOTE]
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