Earlier today I read a post that made my head spin.
Not because it was insightful. Not because it was brave. Mostly because I got to the end of it and thought, “Well... that certainly was a choice.”
When an Invitation Actually Means Something
For context, I was recently invited to beta test a new platform. Not the one where I saw the post, but another one that’s still not public yet.
I was genuinely honoured to be invited, and I took it seriously. I’ve been building spaces, trying features, testing all the bells and whistles, and sending bug reports when needed. In other words, actually beta testing.
Because that’s the job.
You don’t get invited in early just to play with the fun stuff and then act personally victimized when effort, cost, or responsibility enters the chat. You’re there to help shape something. To contribute. To notice what works, what doesn’t, and what might help make it better.
Then I Read That Post
So when I read this very public, very long-winded post from someone basically saying, “I have no money, and here’s a detailed explanation that somehow removes all responsibility from me,” I had a serious moment.
Now listen, I understand that people struggle. I understand money can be tight. I understand not every offer is going to work for every person. That part is not the issue.
The issue is the decision to make that kind of complaint public in a way that showed absolutely no awareness of how it might affect other people, especially the person who built the platform.
And that’s where I hit the wall.
Some Things Should Be Private
Because some things should be said in private. Some things should be handled with a little grace. And some things really do not need to be posted for the whole internet to witness like it’s a community theatre production of Poor Me: The Director’s Cut.
There is a huge difference between being disappointed and being reckless.
If something isn’t for you, fine. Ask questions. Decline politely. Walk away. Send a private message. Be an adult about it.
What you do not need to do is turn your frustration into a public performance and expect people not to notice the giant red flags flapping in the breeze.
Kindness Is Not Something to Trample
What bothered me most is that the creator of this platform is a kind person. A genuinely thoughtful, generous, brilliant person.
The founder pricing offered to early supporters was more than fair. Honestly, it was generous. So seeing someone complain about that publicly, in a way that was clearly upsetting and unfair to the creator, did not sit right with me at all.
That part really stuck with me.
Because when someone is building something new and trying to do right by people, the least you can do is respond with a little maturity and basic decency.
Public Posts Tell on People
It also made me think a bigger thought.
Have we gotten so used to entitlement that people don’t even recognize it anymore?
Because that post didn’t read like honesty to me. It read like poor judgment. It read like someone telling on themselves without realizing they were doing it. It read like one giant flashing sign that said, “If anything ever goes wrong, I can promise you it will not be my fault.”
And maybe that sounds harsh, but come on.
How people behave when they’re disappointed matters.
How they respond to generosity matters.
How they speak about others in public matters.
And if someone is showing you, in real time, how they handle friction, why would you ignore that?
That’s not being judgy. That’s pattern recognition.
Not Every Thought Needs a Stage
Not every frustration needs a public audience.
Not every opinion needs a “post” button.
And not every inside thought needs to be released into the wild wearing no supervision and bad shoes.
There is a difference between being honest and being unprofessional.
There is a difference between being real and being careless.
And there is definitely a difference between having a private concern and creating a public mess.
The Free Trial of Future Problems
At the end of the day, people can post whatever they want. That doesn’t mean it’s wise, professional, or free from consequences.
If you choose to publicly showcase your lack of judgment, don’t be surprised when people take notes. Because they will.
Some thoughts are indoor thoughts, and some posts are basically a free trial of future problems.
Until next time friends...




