+ChileHead Posted June 7, 2006 Share Posted June 7, 2006 I log all my DNFs and am proud of it (well, proud that I log them, not proud that I DNF!) If I didn't have time to complete a long multi, or didn't finish a puzzle, or didn't look because of muggles or another reason, I post a note. Quote Link to comment
+CYBret Posted June 7, 2006 Share Posted June 7, 2006 Unfortunately, I also log all my DNF's. No matter how stupid they make me look. Bret Quote Link to comment
+GrnXnham Posted June 10, 2006 Share Posted June 10, 2006 People are VERY worried about hurting their ego. When they log a DNF, they feel it hurts their ego, so most cachers do not log DNF's. The funny thing about this is that almost no cachers I've talked to who refuse to DNF will admit it's about their ego. After all, it hurts your ego to admit that you are worried about your ego! Doesn't take long for any debate to degenerate into accusations of impure motive. People who don't log DNFs to your standard of purity are protecting their egos, right? Making statements condemning others' impure motives and implicity congratulating oneself is strong medicine for the ego, too. The never-DNF guy might just want to fail privately, but the DNF-scold is boasting publicly. This wasn't an "accusation." Nor is worrying about your ego an impure motive. It's completely human to be concerned about your ego. I know I am concerned about mine. I'm no different than everyone else on this planet as far as that. When we 1st started geocaching, we didn't DNF either. After a while, we saw the value in it and now we always post our DNF's despite our bruised ego. A lot of cachers I talk to don't seem to understand why people DNF. I'm simply offering an explanation for it. I'm not angry at people for DNF's. I totally understand and expect it. I'm sorry if you thought this was some kind of attack on other cachers. None intended at all. Just pointing out the human nature that we are all a part of. Quote Link to comment
+Jamie Z Posted June 10, 2006 Share Posted June 10, 2006 This is my cache in a parking lot of a large outdoor hunting camping store. Now look at all the finds on the three nearby caches in the same parking lot. Did you just say that there are *four* caches in a parking lot? One of them is yours? Glad I don't live near you. Jamie Quote Link to comment
+Tprints Posted June 11, 2006 Share Posted June 11, 2006 I'm up to 252 DNF's now. Do I win? Actually 3 or 4 of them are for a cacher that refuses to log his DNF's so I logged some on my own caches that I know he should have. I guess I should also mention that he screwed up one of my caches but I didn't know about it for awhile because he never logged a DNF to let me know that there may be a problem with it. Quote Link to comment
+sadukie Posted June 12, 2006 Share Posted June 12, 2006 I log my DNFs and then I usually contact whoever placed the cache. In the few DNFs we've had, one did turn out to be a missing cache. I figure that if I log my DNFs, then the maintainers can check if it's missing or they may be able to steer my newbieness in the right direction. Quote Link to comment
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