Picklechu said:
He's still be going downhill no matter what at this point, but Facebook is like a lubricant of sorts, speeding up the process.
Agreed. Take his latest post about his galpals. Blathering his indignance about how they're not waiting on him hand and foot is nothing new, and is relatively innocuous, but it does represent a problem that Chris has been suffering from for over a decade now.
The post in question:
Chris was long bemoaning the state of his life, and then his house caught fire. In that time, he could have focused exclusively on the goodwill that others were showing him in a time of need, and not said anything about his pity pals at all. But, here we are, with Chris once again calling out people who have very little to do with him. This is due to Chris's absurd fantasy that the world owes him both a comfortable living and emotional satisfaction. The world isn't giving over, however, and this upsets Chris. These days, when Chris gets upset, he lashes out.
Again, this particular post may not necessarily cause any problems; the women in question may not even know he put this message up. The real issue is that Chris, even in this pathetic, T-rex armed way, is stirring up trouble where none need be. Bringing an attraction sign to the PVCC campus was a bad idea. Okay, fine, lesson learned, leave it alone, right? Oh, no. Chris insisted on bringing the sign back. When he was banned from the Game Place the second time, that should have been a clear enough message that he wasn't to come back, but indeed, Fat Dummy tried to casually stroll in shortly after the ban, as if no one would notice him. Then we have the Fashion Square Mall trolling of 2012, followed by the stupid Pittsburgh Pirates riddle, and his insistence that we try to figure it out. Not only did no one fall for these tricks, but both of them ended with Chris crapping a continent of conniption fits when we turned the tables on him. Then there was the Walmart incident of 2013. It all ends up blowing up in Chris's face, because he never counts on failure or consequence.
In a way, we are very much like Sarah, Tiffany, and Kellie, in that Chris doesn't know
anything about us. When he tries to provoke us, he gets more than he bargained for, because he doesn't know what the bargain entails. It could be that somehow, remote as the chance may seem, Chris could end up ranting at one of the wrong ex-gal pals one day.