I'm clearly in the minority here. Just going to add one more point to my side of the debate. When I signed up here, I was very nearly at the end. I had actually signed up to the PTSD site, made my introduction and it was Anthony that pointed me here. But being somewhat computer literate, I knew the standard conventions of web forums and made my introduction first then started vomiting posts...
Since that time there have been many people come and go. Most members make their introduction. Some join to sell their snake oil (some of those make introductions selling it, some don't introduce themselves and just start selling). That pisses us all off and they are quickly banned. Some people join and lurk for a while, silently reading the posts and getting the courage to open themselves up. These people are not the topic of this discussion.
It's the person who joins this forum, who needs help, and who's usually in a pretty bad state when they do it. It's been a bit since I signed up and I have to admit that I don't clearly remember all of the stages of the sign up. But if you think back to the day you joined and the state you were in, would you have joined if you were "forced" to make an introduction? I can honestly say that I'm not sure. I'm not at that point in my life and my memories of those days are kinda blurred by days of no sleep at all.
If you go to an AA meeting, you can quietly sit at the back listening and thinking, without standing up and introducing yourself. This policy has saved many, many people. But the people like this are not our problem. It's the people who join, start making posts and don't get the message or who are full of spit and vinegar and piss people off. AA won't let you go ranting with or without an introduction...you just get asked to leave.
We are all here desperately trying to get help with a very difficult issue(s). Most of us are also trying to help our brothers and sisters deal with the devastation of PTSD.
We currently have a system that is not perfect. It requires us, the members, to police ourselves. It does let a few asshats through the wire. It does allow them to rattle our cages. But in each and every case that I have witnessed, I or someone else very quickly points these people to fill out an introduction. And I think its a very simple and clear thing: polite point of courtesy, warning, banned. Three strikes and you're out. It does put a larger burden on Anthony, Jimmy, Sarg, JarHead and a couple others whom I don't remember, as they actually have to push the button.
But if a forced introduction turns away one person who really needs help... I'd really hate to be that guy.
Since that time there have been many people come and go. Most members make their introduction. Some join to sell their snake oil (some of those make introductions selling it, some don't introduce themselves and just start selling). That pisses us all off and they are quickly banned. Some people join and lurk for a while, silently reading the posts and getting the courage to open themselves up. These people are not the topic of this discussion.
It's the person who joins this forum, who needs help, and who's usually in a pretty bad state when they do it. It's been a bit since I signed up and I have to admit that I don't clearly remember all of the stages of the sign up. But if you think back to the day you joined and the state you were in, would you have joined if you were "forced" to make an introduction? I can honestly say that I'm not sure. I'm not at that point in my life and my memories of those days are kinda blurred by days of no sleep at all.
If you go to an AA meeting, you can quietly sit at the back listening and thinking, without standing up and introducing yourself. This policy has saved many, many people. But the people like this are not our problem. It's the people who join, start making posts and don't get the message or who are full of spit and vinegar and piss people off. AA won't let you go ranting with or without an introduction...you just get asked to leave.
We are all here desperately trying to get help with a very difficult issue(s). Most of us are also trying to help our brothers and sisters deal with the devastation of PTSD.
We currently have a system that is not perfect. It requires us, the members, to police ourselves. It does let a few asshats through the wire. It does allow them to rattle our cages. But in each and every case that I have witnessed, I or someone else very quickly points these people to fill out an introduction. And I think its a very simple and clear thing: polite point of courtesy, warning, banned. Three strikes and you're out. It does put a larger burden on Anthony, Jimmy, Sarg, JarHead and a couple others whom I don't remember, as they actually have to push the button.
But if a forced introduction turns away one person who really needs help... I'd really hate to be that guy.