Yes, the frustration is real. Why is there frustration? Usually, on anything in life, it comes from lacking the proper understanding of 1) what has been undertaken; 2)what is going on now; and, 3) finally, what still is required to be done?
If we try to use a generalized or generic response to any of the above, it won't matter what management says or what we think --- we both would not be on the same page. There would be no real and meaningful dialogue. In fact, each others' answers to one another's question would confound the other. Hence, frustration is real.
A big part of this frustration is that most of us got in too early on this stock and thought the return on investment would be much, much sooner. So even if management is doing everything right now, the kind of expectations we have of them would still be unrealistic in a comprehensive way. However, on some of the smaller details, many of us would have a valid argument. It is there where I feel that management made mistakes and gave many here the wrong impression. However, the last two or three presentations of information that they were able to make public has been clearer and more understandable than ever before; it is our own impatience or lack of understanding that generates frustration.
In the Sahara desert are huge sand dunes. You are desperately searching for an oasis. One sand dune after another tests your patience, resolve, and hopes. You gave up not knowing that one or two sand dunes away was a bustling town around an oasis. The camel that you were riding brought you into town while you sat atop it unconscious.
I don't know everything either, but I feel that POET (my camel) will bring me to that oasis.
Monolithic