The internet is full of "Original Posters" (OP) , but how many of them are actually being original?
In an age of curated feeds and polished LinkedIn profiles, we are all professional "up-standers." We stand tall, show our best angles, and highlight only our wins. But there is a growing movement—a quiet, rebellious whisper—saying: (Human, fall flat on the internet.)
What does it mean to "fall flat" online? It isn't just about those viral "fail" videos we all love to watch. It’s about the courage to be horizontal in a vertical world. The Exhaustion of Standing Tall Mens: val plat op internet
Share the messy desk, not just the finished project.
At the end of the day, gravity always wins. We can’t stay on our tiptoes forever. Instead of waiting for a "fail" to knock us down, why not choose to "val plat" on our own terms? The internet is full of "Original Posters" (OP)
Be a human first, and a profile second. Because the most interesting thing about us isn't how well we stand, but how we get back up after we fall.
When you actually do fall flat—figuratively or literally—be the first one to share the clip . Conclusion: Gravity Wins Eventually It isn't just about those viral "fail" videos
The phrase is a Dutch expression that can be interpreted in two ways: literally, as "Man: falls flat on the internet" (referring to a failure or a "fail" video), or figuratively, as "People: be authentic on the internet" (encouraging people to stop pretending and "lay flat/be real").