Don’t Think of It as Censorship. Think of It as Feedback.

By Pearl
I used to have 617 friends.
“Surely, Pearl,” you say. “You are exaggerating.  No one has 617 friends.”
 “I used to have 617 friends,” I respond.  “Now I have 616.  And stop calling me Shirley.”
The truth is that Pearl – good ol’ Pearl! – has jumped the greased  -- nay, lubed – tracks of what passes for social discourse and become, in one fell swoop, out of touch. 
“Don’t look now,” writes #616, “but I had boudoir pics taken!”  But she doesn’t give me time to not look now, and suddenly I am thrust – if that’s not too loaded a word – into the soft-focus snapshots of her fantasy life.
Which apparently includes wearing the equivalent of a spool of thread. 
While posing upside down.
And peering from between her naughty, naughty fingers.
There she is, her own centerfold appearance.
On Facebook. 
Look.  I’m all for fantasy.  And I like a good come-hither look as much as the next gal.  But when you’ve posted pics of yourself in a two-piece take-out container holding a pair of chopsticks – is that what that was? – it’s going to take all the reserve I have not to comment with the first thing that comes to my mind:  What?  Leftovers again?!
There were several of these photos, posted, one after another:  different outfits, different positions, but all with the same moist-eyed, lips-parted expression.
Aren’t I pretty?  Don’t you want me?
Sure you are; and no, I don’t.
I was sorry to see #616 go.  We never shared a meal, laughed ourselves off the furniture, never even had a conversation.
But we will always have the fact that I know what she looks like in braided dental floss.  And I guess that’s something.