25 Oct 2018

Practical guide to taking over the CLANG

Have you ever been in a situation when you wanted to raise your CLANG as usual, but suddenly noticed strange reaction of people around you? Perhaps you’d been climbing over the neighbouring hill to proudly waive your CLANG from this high point, when you’d realize that people averting gazes, changing the side of the street, or plainly stare at you with cold creepy eyes?..

Whether it was as dramatic or not, whether you were on receiving end or brought it down yourself, if you have lived in society long enough, you probably had witnessed this phenomenon. One might say that it’s not even worth singling out as something special, because in the end the CLANG was never really the CLANG you meant it to be. And that’s valid point from one perspective.

But the world is so full of ambiguity that having just one “ambiguity” category for it doesn’t seem to be enough. Taking over the CLANG isn’t only a recurring phenomenon, it’s also one that can be (and thus most likely was) used intentionally, the most obvious motive being destruction of whatever stood behind said CLANG.

When this happens, does it make sense to continue using your stained CLANG, explaining what you real mean on the way? Or to create a new CLANG and hope it will work for a while? Or disregard society opinion or perhaps the whole concept of CLANGs?

Or maybe you should at least stop treating people by the CLANG they use?

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