Analysis
on January 10, 2010 at 9:17 pmYesterday I visited an apartment belonging to a friend of a friend for drinks with three guys I know well, and two I had never met before. After a couple of hours we decided to make a move to a bar and so we walked out of the kitchen into the hall, and as I waited for everyone to get their coats, a drunken wrestling match broke out in a bedroom leaving myself and one of my new acquaintances (Jack) in the entrance to the apartment. Seeing legs flying and the creaking of the bed, I couldn’t help but glance into the bedroom to see what exactly was going on. I was suprised to hear the following from Jack-
“I can see you’re not interested in talking to me, you’re thinking ‘I’d much rather be in that bedroom with everyone else’”
I found this very interesting. Firstly, when reading a statement such as that, it is easy to assume that the person saying this has low self-esteem or confidence, taking my lack of interest in conversation as something of an insult. In fact it was delivered in a really flat way as if [i]I[/i] was the one who should be insulted because of my lack of conversation and/or social skills. I say insulted, but of course the comment was light hearted.
Secondly, my reaction was totally defensive, almost as if I was embarrassed to be “found out” of not wanting a conversation. In fact I hadn’t even noticed that we [i]should[/i] have been having a conversation which is why it caught me so off-guard.
Thirdly, once I started thinking that I should be conversing, I could not think of a single thing to say. This isn’t exactly uncommon: at the point of a silence becoming akward (all in the mind of the participant of course) minds go blank, thus creating a self reinforcing cycle.
In conclusion, it’s not what you say, its how you say it.
did yu hear about new iphone 4.0? For me, one of the best features in iPhone OS 4.0 is its multitasking feature. And you?