Alamee, you seem very young. And very sweet. Pay no attention to the number of posts. When we comment on someone making a thousand posts, they change their status from "resident" to "pillar" and everyone celebrates - kind of like graduating from highschool. Only instead of studying, we had read and commented on hundreds of threads about people's pet and started threads of our own. We also congratulate these people because they've been here for a long time and we've all gotten to know them through their posts. What I'm saying is that most people hit 1,000 post after a looong time. They have become friends of sorts - even though most of us have never met in person. They are still our friends.

At the rate you're running, you'll hit a thousand posts and nobody will know who you are. And by who you are, I mean by saying: are you someone with a sense of humor? Are you someone who is very serious and works hard? Are you someone who has strong ideas? We don't know any of that yet. Read the "congratulations" thread and they almost always say "To one of PTs most compassionate people" or "To a PTer who's posts are witty and funny" or "A most dedicated PTer finally hits 1,000" etc. These people show their personality in their posts, and people have gotten to "know" them through it. We shouldn't know vital statistics about you - like how old you are (espcially if you're very young) and where you're from because that could be especially bad for younger people. We need to watch out for our younger PTers. We just need to know the person you are without the physical details... if that makes any sense.

Try to keep the responses such as "Ok, I will" and "oh, I see" to a minimum. Perhaps after a good numbers of replies, you can return and say "Thank you for the advice. I'm still just trying to figure things out." and then add a new question in the same reply instead of adding one in a whole new post. People will start to ignore your posts if they are too numerous and without much content. I'm not saying that to be mean.... its human nature and I want you to get the most enjoyment out of PT as possible.