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Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by aky85(m): 1:24pm On Dec 04, 2017
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

































































































































































































































































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1 Like

Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by Mirko877: 2:13pm On Dec 04, 2017
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

































































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839



































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839




Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

































































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839



































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839




Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

































































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839



































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839




Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

































































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839



































































































































































































































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Try this Tool http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839/

1 Like

Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by Mirko877: 4:09pm On Dec 06, 2017
up grin

1 Like

Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by Mirko877: 7:17pm On Dec 10, 2017
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by sarahahrevealer: 11:17am On Dec 26, 2017
Sarahah Reveal available here http://sarahah-reveals.com/13505/
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by sarahahrevealer: 11:20am On Dec 26, 2017
Latest Sarahah Revealer available here: http://sarahah-reveals.com/13505/
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by Eri94: 11:37am On Dec 26, 2017
[url]Http://sarahahfind.fun/reveals[/url] Check the link to Reveal Sarahah.

2 Likes

Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 7:34pm On Dec 29, 2017
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 7:38pm On Dec 29, 2017
Truly obviously, similar to each applications, there are a few deceives you can use to know or to do what you shouldn't.

Sarahah is extremely famous nowadays. Each one can send you a message and stays unknown. In any case it move toward becoming intersting when you discover who sent your a message. Furthermore, it can be useful to know who are your genuine companion, who are definitely not.

I know this apparatus works exceptionally well to uncovers who sent your a message as of late on Sarahah. It's sheltered and simple to utilize, that is the reason I recommand it to you. Here is the connection
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Simply attempt and judge independent from anyone else.

I need to state I was extremely astonished when I utilized it, and a few people I thought were companions are not my companions any longer…

The "trustworthiness first" mystery informing application with 18 million clients, Sarahah

You should be careful with this application in light of the fact that the unknown criticism application may not be as private as it truly sounds.

Sarahah is an as of late moved application that has ended up being a standout amongst the most smoking iPhone and Android applications in the current weeks, empowering its customers to join to get anonymised, bona fide messages from other Sarahah clients. Nonetheless, for no good reason the application unobtrusively exchanges customers' phone contacts to the association's servers for no good reason, spotted by security analyst Zachary Julian.

At the point when an Android or iOS customer downloads and presents the application suddenly, the application in a split second gathers and exchanges all phone numbers and email addresses from the customer's address book, according to The Intercept.

While an application requesting access to the customer's phonebook is exceptionally typical if the application gives any part that works with contacts, no such helpfulness in Sarahah is open right at this point.

"The insurance course of action especially communicates that in case it expects to use your data, it'll ask for your consent, while the application's passageway in Google's Play Store demonstrates the application will get to contacts, that is deficient consent to legitimize sending those contacts over with no kind of specific notice"

Be that as it may, the creator of Sarahah, Zain al-Abidin Tawfiq, responded to the story by saying his application truly accumulates and exchanges the contacts from customers to the association's servers for a component that will be executed at a later time. Tawfiq said that customers' contact records are being exchanged "for a masterminded 'find your colleagues' component," which was "conceded due to a specific issue" and was accidentally not removed from the Sarahah's available variant.

Tawfiq in like manner ensured its customers that "the data request will be cleared on next revive" to the application and that Sarahah's servers don't "starting at now have contacts," which is, clearly, hard to check.

Sarahah overpowered the Internet inside couple of weeks, making the application the third most downloaded free application programming for iPhones and iPads.

The application has recently been downloaded by a normal 18 Million customers from Apple and Google's online stores.

In any case, you can regardless use Sarahah by preventing the application from getting to your contacts, without taking a risk with your contacts to be exchanged to its servers.Since fresher Android working structures (starting with Android 6.0 Marshmallow) do empower customers to limit assents for applications, customers can keep approvals so applications don't get to contacts or other information that doesn't have anything to do with the app's.
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 7:42pm On Dec 29, 2017
aky85:
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app. Reveal Sarahah Username here>>>> http://sarahahfind.fun/reveals

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.



This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �

1 Like

Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by markos32: 8:08pm On Dec 29, 2017
aky85:
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.[b] Sarahah Revea[/b]l >>>>>[url] http://sarahah-reveals.com/23111[/url]

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.



This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by Eri94: 9:43am On Jan 01, 2018
aky85:
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app. Reveal sarahah here >>>>>http://sarahah-reveals.com/23111

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.



This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 1:32pm On Mar 31, 2018
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 1:38pm On Mar 31, 2018
Mirko877:
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/



Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/































































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/



Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.
http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/



Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/



Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































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Try this Tool http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 1:41pm On Mar 31, 2018
aky85:
Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


hhttp://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































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Re: Who Sent Me Message On Sarahah? Reveal Sarahah Sender's Identity by marina12: 1:44pm On Mar 31, 2018
[quote author=Mirko877 post=62971848]Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/



































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/



Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839


Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































hhttp://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839




Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/

This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
































































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


































































































































































































































http://sarahah-reveals.com/24839




Sarahah is fast becoming one of the most popular apps all over the world thanks to social networking. For those that don’t yet know what Sarahah is, it is an application that lets you send messages to someone anonymously, without even having to register on the app.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/

Created with the intent of self-development by way of receiving honest anonymous feedback from people, especially from employees to employers, Sarahah is trending both on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, for all the right and wrong reasons.

When you’re provided with a platform to say anything — good or bad — to someone and that someone’s never going to find out who you are, well, you’re going to have a field day.

http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/
This is how anyone could use the Sarahah app, I’m sure many of you would too:


To the high school bully: The earth rotates; one day, your turn will come to be the loser. Good luck then. Karma bites.

To the crush who friend-zoned me: You’re beautiful. But you’re the most selfish b*tch I’ve ever met. You only think of yourself. I pray that a truck runs over you.

To the friend who belittles you: I had your mother for a night. And she wasn’t even that good in bed. No wonder you turn out the way you are.

To a girl you might have a chance with, who has a sh*tty boyfriend: You deserve better. Your boyfriend is cheating on you with Patrice.

The possibilities are endless. While the message box on Sarahah reads ‘Leave a constructive message smiley’, there’s a good chance you would end up writing a hurtful message if you’re not particularly fond of the person. And the smiley smiley at the end of the sentence, I believe, is meant for sarcasm.

Come to think of it, if you’re given a platform to say anything to someone anonymously, you’re more likely to end up writing negative thoughts about the person. Because whatever good thoughts you have about someone, you could always tell him/her in person, and they would be pleased.

Sure, there are some things, good things, that you can’t directly tell a person. And Sarahah is the perfect platform for such situations. Case in point, the crush who friend-zoned you; you could tell her how you truly feel. When the suspicions subside and the cloud eventually settles, there’s a good chance you might finally break the friend-zone. Otherwise, you could deny everything.

Think of your favorite celebrity. Say, he’s on Sarahah and he has openly shared his profile link on Instagram and Facebook for the whole world to be able to send anonymous messages. You, as a fan, are likely to end up writing a positive feedback. Or you might not. Because you could always comment a positive feedback openly on his FB and Instagram posts, and you don’t need to hide your identity for that. It is more likely that this celebrity will receive hate messages, given that the sender is anonymous.

While I may think that Kanye West is the biggest douchebag in the entire universe, I’m never going to post how I feel about him as a comment on his Facebook or Instagram post. But if he’s on Sarahah, there’s a good chance I will end up posting a most racist and hurtful message.

The term Sarahah stands for ‘honesty’ in Arabic. Honesty, however, can now be loosely defined as having the guts to express negative opinions about someone. If you tell a girl to her face that she is beautiful, it’s not honesty. It’s flattery. If you tell a girl to her face she is fat and needs to lose weight, that’s honesty. It’s the new definition.

So, if you’re using Sarahah — the honesty app — there’s a good chance you would end up receiving a larger number of negative messages than positive.

It’s the hard truth. And I am being honest. �


http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/































































































































































































































































http://23111.sarahah-reveals.com/


































































































































































































































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