Every once in awhile I make a post about communication with Minnesotans, because I know how frustrating we can be to well-meaning outsiders. I've been thinking about it after seeing a couple of friends from the south (the real south this time, not my usual value of south, which is Iowa, or Albert Lea, or on a really bad day Farmington) expressing
(
Read more... )
Comments 97
*loff*
S'okay. Some of us are happy just to breathe at you.
Reply
It's a companionable sort of breathing.
Reply
Want some tea?
Reply
Reply
Reply
One of the problems I have is that I present gregariously to the outside world, and that can very easily be mistaken for extroversion by people who don't know the difference -- or even people who do know the difference but haven't spotted the signs that in another 20 minutes I am going to go collapse from all these monkeys.
Reply
I don't think I ever come across as gregarious, but people have been known to read "functionally social" as "ready to keep on for hours" rather than "I'm resorting to every conversational strategy I know to remain engaged at an acceptable level until my extroverted spouse finally catches my signal that I need to go home NOW."
Granted, it's hard to fault them for misreading me when I'm doing my best to be discreet. I like to think I only get really cranky when someone isn't allowing me to escape quickly and graciously, and even then there's often some sort of alcohol-based elevation of insecurity involved. Oh, how I've come to hate the question, "But aren't you having fun?"
There are times I wish there were Betan-style earrings for thresholds of interactivity.
Reply
I can do the social thing. But only for so long.
Reply
(The comment has been removed)
Reply
(The comment has been removed)
Reply
My personal experience with men and sociabilty does not match the stereotype at all. Both badger2305 and Mike Ford are/were extremely social in public. If you look closely, the subjects never got near personal feelings on sensitive subjects. Books and movies, yes. Relationships, no.
Back to the original situation, there is a comfort in being able to tell a friend "things aren't going so good" and have her understand exactly what you mean. And understand that you have not lost all sense of correct English grammar, you are using a local phrase for a specific purpose. The flip side is knowing that "not bad at all" means cause for celebration.
Reply
Reply
Also, there is: "Don’t speak unless you can improve the silence."
Reply
Leave a comment