Anonymous2: @Anonymous: That's a bit of a misconception. The interpretation of vague, indistinct images a-la Rorschach test do not reveal what a subject most desires, as is often wrongly claimed, but rather what is closest to the forefront of their mind. The thing that they obsess over most, be it consciously or unconsciously.
While our uncouth friend may not strictly desire a fat steamer falling upon his chest, the idea of one is never far from his thoughts.
That is, of course, me being generous and not assuming he's just itching, at all times of day, at the prospect of comparing someone of African descent to literal feces out of some pathetic inferiority complex. Because, really, what could be more pitiful.
Anonymous3: What could be more pitiful? Stretching the boundaries of logic and reason to their absolute limit to make a needlessly complex psychological reason that seeing a large, cylindrical, brown object falling out of someone's anus as feces must be some form of latent racism or obsession with shit. Our friend Roger here outright states he "was sure it was a fat turd plopping out of her ass", clearly indicating that while that was his assumption at first, such is no longer the case, noting the past tense connotations of was.
Not that it matters, the given image isn't nearly vague or abstract enough for the mind to fill in the required information to make the kind of assumptions that say, a Rorschach test could. It simply provides too much information for that to be accurate.
- Reply
While our uncouth friend may not strictly desire a fat steamer falling upon his chest, the idea of one is never far from his thoughts.
That is, of course, me being generous and not assuming he's just itching, at all times of day, at the prospect of comparing someone of African descent to literal feces out of some pathetic inferiority complex. Because, really, what could be more pitiful.
Not that it matters, the given image isn't nearly vague or abstract enough for the mind to fill in the required information to make the kind of assumptions that say, a Rorschach test could. It simply provides too much information for that to be accurate.