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Dear Diary Examples Average ratng: 4,2/5 9806 reviews

It’s been a while since I wrote in you. Possibly as long as 17 years.

Since that last entry in – hang on, let me just check – NINETEEN NINETY‑SIX – a lot has happened. Take That have got back together again, for example. (I really should have let you know that, given that one of my last entries was a tear-splodged account of the press conference the band gave on February 13 1996, announcing their intention to break up.) And Mum and Dad did get divorced, as I feared. But it wasn’t the end of the world, as it turns out.

I think it was really quite good for them, actually. Avakin life play for free. Anyway, I went looking for you today, inspired by a piece I read in the newspaper.

Many of us believed that 21st-century teenagers had done away with diaries, in favour of social media and texting each other pictures of their naughty bits (I know, I know. But what can you do about it?). And yet it seems that this is not the case.

According to a survey carried out by market researchers Otherlines.tv, 83 per cent of girls aged between 16 and 19 keep a personal pen-and-paper diary, compared with just 69 per cent back in our day (the Nineties, when everything was black and white and only Cool Katie in the year above had the internet, which took two hours to dial up. FYI – oh, I shall explain these new acronyms later – Cool Katie ended up divorced at 26, and the last I saw she was banging on about how she believes in angels on Facebook). But I digress, dear Diary.

Dear Diary Examples

If you have stomach complaints, a food diary helps you understand which foods are causing you. The start of a new year, for example, is a fitting occasion. Something like: 'Dear diary', 'Today I' or 'Right now, I'm.'

When questioned, 71 per cent of girls said they post some of their feelings on social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter. But a massive 95 per cent said that they keep their deepest emotions off the world wide web, while more than three quarters said that they worry about posting thoughts online.

Which safely quashes the widely held belief that we have bred a generation of teenagers so tech-obsessed that they are happy to vomit every cough, spit and relationship break-up on to the internet.

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It’s been a while since I wrote in you. Possibly as long as 17 years.

Since that last entry in – hang on, let me just check – NINETEEN NINETY‑SIX – a lot has happened. Take That have got back together again, for example. (I really should have let you know that, given that one of my last entries was a tear-splodged account of the press conference the band gave on February 13 1996, announcing their intention to break up.) And Mum and Dad did get divorced, as I feared. But it wasn’t the end of the world, as it turns out.

I think it was really quite good for them, actually. Avakin life play for free. Anyway, I went looking for you today, inspired by a piece I read in the newspaper.

Many of us believed that 21st-century teenagers had done away with diaries, in favour of social media and texting each other pictures of their naughty bits (I know, I know. But what can you do about it?). And yet it seems that this is not the case.

According to a survey carried out by market researchers Otherlines.tv, 83 per cent of girls aged between 16 and 19 keep a personal pen-and-paper diary, compared with just 69 per cent back in our day (the Nineties, when everything was black and white and only Cool Katie in the year above had the internet, which took two hours to dial up. FYI – oh, I shall explain these new acronyms later – Cool Katie ended up divorced at 26, and the last I saw she was banging on about how she believes in angels on Facebook). But I digress, dear Diary.

Dear Diary Examples

If you have stomach complaints, a food diary helps you understand which foods are causing you. The start of a new year, for example, is a fitting occasion. Something like: 'Dear diary', 'Today I' or 'Right now, I'm.'

When questioned, 71 per cent of girls said they post some of their feelings on social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter. But a massive 95 per cent said that they keep their deepest emotions off the world wide web, while more than three quarters said that they worry about posting thoughts online.

Which safely quashes the widely held belief that we have bred a generation of teenagers so tech-obsessed that they are happy to vomit every cough, spit and relationship break-up on to the internet.

...">Dear Diary Examples(07.05.2020)
  • Dear Diary Examples Average ratng: 4,2/5 9806 reviews
  • It’s been a while since I wrote in you. Possibly as long as 17 years.

    Since that last entry in – hang on, let me just check – NINETEEN NINETY‑SIX – a lot has happened. Take That have got back together again, for example. (I really should have let you know that, given that one of my last entries was a tear-splodged account of the press conference the band gave on February 13 1996, announcing their intention to break up.) And Mum and Dad did get divorced, as I feared. But it wasn’t the end of the world, as it turns out.

    I think it was really quite good for them, actually. Avakin life play for free. Anyway, I went looking for you today, inspired by a piece I read in the newspaper.

    Many of us believed that 21st-century teenagers had done away with diaries, in favour of social media and texting each other pictures of their naughty bits (I know, I know. But what can you do about it?). And yet it seems that this is not the case.

    According to a survey carried out by market researchers Otherlines.tv, 83 per cent of girls aged between 16 and 19 keep a personal pen-and-paper diary, compared with just 69 per cent back in our day (the Nineties, when everything was black and white and only Cool Katie in the year above had the internet, which took two hours to dial up. FYI – oh, I shall explain these new acronyms later – Cool Katie ended up divorced at 26, and the last I saw she was banging on about how she believes in angels on Facebook). But I digress, dear Diary.

    Dear Diary Examples

    If you have stomach complaints, a food diary helps you understand which foods are causing you. The start of a new year, for example, is a fitting occasion. Something like: 'Dear diary', 'Today I' or 'Right now, I'm.'

    When questioned, 71 per cent of girls said they post some of their feelings on social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter. But a massive 95 per cent said that they keep their deepest emotions off the world wide web, while more than three quarters said that they worry about posting thoughts online.

    Which safely quashes the widely held belief that we have bred a generation of teenagers so tech-obsessed that they are happy to vomit every cough, spit and relationship break-up on to the internet.

    ...">Dear Diary Examples(07.05.2020)