funeralxempire wrote:
You're not missing out if the show doesn't interest you.
You're only missing out on being able to socialize over the show if that interests you.
How does one socialise over a show?
Example. Let's say I try and I watch something and while watching it I talk, and get told off for talking... So I wait until after and I talk about the details and others don't want to know about what car they were in and what train they travelled on. They just want the boring bits about what people said to each other! Meanwhile they are missing out on the really good parts! Passing bicycles. Cars. Motorbikes. (Don't know so much about them as find helmets claustrophobic so could only manage 15 minutes a time with an open face helmet before I had to stop to pull the thing off! My car licence allowed me to ride up to 50cc. Due to helmets I never bothered going into motorbikes. I am fine with bicycle helmets as they don't cover my ears! Is the covering of the face of ears I struggle with!) Trains... yes!
Trams.
Boats are ok and planes. Uhmmm. But why do we want to talk about people? Not unless they like trains and are talking about trains!
What actually is socializing?
When I used to be asked "Where do I socialize?" I would ask what they mean and they would ask " Which pub I went to". I don't go to pubs! I have probably been in less pubs than I am in age, and that includes marriages and things like that. Maybe (As have sometimes been in a pub for a lunchtime meal when others wanted us (Mum and I) to go there) about average one a year through my life but about two a year in the last decade (Before that about one every five to ten years due to weddings? I only twice drank alcohol in a pub and that was when I was 18 when others insisted and tried to get me drunk on my birthday. I refused to drink much and where I first worked at Christmas. I didn't really enjoy it. Was given a beer and they said it was cheap at less than £1 a pint. Think it was 78p. That is a lot I thought as I knew I could buy a whole big bottle of cola for less than half that in those days. Though going back before that fizzy pops cost a lot. 65p but one did get 10p back when one returned the bottle! But that was before supermarkets came along and outsourced the smaller shops and the big brands of fizzy pops started to undercut the smaller pop factories. The smaller pop factories owned the glass bottles which was why they have 10p back so one would return them!