what does "socially awkward" mean? examples?

Page 1 of 2 [ 20 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next

movik
Butterfly
Butterfly

User avatar

Joined: 2 Mar 2013
Gender: Female
Posts: 16

14 Apr 2013, 4:21 am

I am NT trying to understand AS. I've come across this phrase thousands of times but it's still too vague. Can you explain it to me please, maybe with examples. Thank you.



Sylvastor
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 3 Jan 2013
Age: 30
Gender: Male
Posts: 781
Location: Germany

14 Apr 2013, 6:15 am

I guess one can sum it up like this:
When I act out of the norm in some (public) situation or a conversation, it is socially awkward.
This can include:

  • Saying nothing at all when someone expects me to say something just because I don't know what to say;
  • Talking too much about a certain topic and not getting subtle cues that indicate that the person is bored/that I should stop doing so;
  • Not comforting someone who is crying (because one has no idea what to do);
  • Not looking someone in the eyes if they expect you to;
  • Staring at someone;
  • Freaking out for no reason for an outsider (by that I mean people who don't have AS and/or don't know the person has it);
  • Retreating for no apparent reason for an outsider;
  • Talking with an odd phonetic/pronounciation;
  • Hating things that nobody else seems to hate or care about (e.g. being touched as a try to be comforted) and reacting in an inappropriate way;
  • etc.

Socially awkward means acting in a way that differs from the norm (in public/in social situations), I guess, basically odd behaviour.
It doesn't necessarily mean socially unacceptable, but I'm pretty sure it is borderline to it. :lol:

I hope I could answer your question. :)


_________________
Diagnosed with Aspergers.
BSP-errors are awesome.


EMTkid
Toucan
Toucan

User avatar

Joined: 22 Mar 2010
Age: 42
Gender: Female
Posts: 269

14 Apr 2013, 9:14 am

It can also mean responding in unusual ways in conversation, or saying random strange things. For examples:

At work one day, my partner ant I were driving back from a call discussing what we were going to have for lunch. After a pause for roughly 5 seconds, I said "Would you come to my funeral?" She just about crashed the ambulance, then asked where the hell that came from. To me, it was rather simple.
1. There was nothing to eat in town but the same fast food places we eat at every week
2. our diets in EMS work are pretty unhealthy
3. Actually, the whole lifestyle is fairly rough on the body. Three of our co-workers have had heart problems in the past 4 years
4. And its not like inward threats are the only problem. People fight us, shoot at us, hold us hostage.
5. 24 hour shifts are rough and can affect our ability to drive. Our friend Chris was killed only a year ago in a wreck on his way home
6. His funeral was the biggest I had ever seen
7. Would mine be that big if I died?
8. Would Linda be there? I should ask her...


And more recently (last week, well into allergy season) My husband and I were driving and he was talking about putting some of that canned foam insulation around the windows. After a few seconds, I said "I don't want to die from something respiratory." My husband, somewhat more used to my randomness, did not about wreck, simply asked where that came from. He seems to enjoy hearing about my weird trains of thought.
1. Yeah, I know that stuff
2. They killed a guy on an episode of CSI:NY with that, sprayed it down his throat during a fight
3. That was such a horrible death scenes, one of the few that really bothered me
4. That's kinda what it feels like when I have an asthma attack
5. Crap, I forgot my inhalor!
6. Suffocation would be the worst possible way to die... I really don't want to die like that

If a person doesn't know enough about me to expect things like that it can really freak them out. I try to watch doing that around people who don't understand, but the problem is that I usually don't realize that the other person doesn't hear my little internal dialogue. It makes perfect sense to me, but the other person is completely lost.



Ganondox
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Oct 2011
Age: 28
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,777
Location: USA

14 Apr 2013, 9:16 am

It means you don't do what's appropriate in social situations and/or are uncomfortable in social situations. So people find it cute, other people find it annoying.


_________________
Cinnamon and sugary
Softly Spoken lies
You never know just how you look
Through other people's eyes

Autism FAQs http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt186115.html


briankelley
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 24 Feb 2012
Age: 62
Gender: Male
Posts: 666
Location: STENDEC

14 Apr 2013, 9:38 am

It means being perceived as being either and or... weird, quirky, odd, strange, offbeat, shifty, aloof, goofy, mouthy, rude, humorless, monotone, inattentive, clueless et al.



Gazelle
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Mar 2012
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,333
Location: Tropical island

14 Apr 2013, 10:31 am

To me it is someone who is uncomfortable in social situations and does know what to do in social situations.


_________________
"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, but that we are powerful beyond measure."


Joe90
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 23 Feb 2010
Gender: Female
Posts: 26,492
Location: UK

14 Apr 2013, 10:32 am

It's hard to say really. I can sometimes be socially awkward, other times not so much. It depends on who I am with aswell.

Being socially awkward can affect different people in different ways. Personally I am quite easy to get along with, most of the time. Well, sometimes when I am with my mum or other close relatives, I can be difficult, like I am be aloof and stressy and say irrelevant things, which often annoys my mum. That's because I don't feel so socially phobic with my close family, so I can speak up a lot more and just be myself.

Being with people outside my family, however, is different. I don't complain or worry or stress so much about things, although I do inwardly but I don't like to show that I do, only to a small extent. I would never have an outburst in front of people that aren't close family. It's embarrassing enough to do that in front of my family, so doing it in front of people that aren't my family would just be too humiliating. But talking to most people outside my family seems more awkward to me because that's where my social phobia comes into play. The things what make me socially awkward are:-

-Not asking as many questions as I should, in other words, not contributing in conversation, not because I don't know how, but because the social phobia seems to stop me from asking questions in a conversation for some strange reason. I suppose that can make me quite socially awkward, even if other people don't really notice it much, it still feels awkward for me

-Not using confidence in my tone of voice, just unintentionally sounding nervous all the time, no matter how much I try to not sound so nervous.

-Going ''yeah'' ''no'' ''oh right'' ''OK'' a lot, I know other people do, but I do it so much, then when there's a pause, I go ''yeah'' or something again, which makes me look awkward as though I never quite know what to say.

-Talking too quietly, like mumbling a lot of the time, so that people can't hear me and have to ask me to repeat.

-Never being sure whether to go with someone or staying where I am. I always think that going with someone might make me look like I'm following, but then staying where I am might make me look standoffish and uninterested. I usually go with their body language.

-Being unsure of telling the difference between joining in and butting in, which is why I stay noticeably quiet in group conversations.


_________________
Female


kamiyu910
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Dec 2012
Age: 39
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,036
Location: California

14 Apr 2013, 11:20 am

EMTkid wrote:
It can also mean responding in unusual ways in conversation, or saying random strange things. For examples:

At work one day, my partner ant I were driving back from a call discussing what we were going to have for lunch. After a pause for roughly 5 seconds, I said "Would you come to my funeral?" She just about crashed the ambulance, then asked where the hell that came from. To me, it was rather simple.
1. There was nothing to eat in town but the same fast food places we eat at every week
2. our diets in EMS work are pretty unhealthy
3. Actually, the whole lifestyle is fairly rough on the body. Three of our co-workers have had heart problems in the past 4 years
4. And its not like inward threats are the only problem. People fight us, shoot at us, hold us hostage.
5. 24 hour shifts are rough and can affect our ability to drive. Our friend Chris was killed only a year ago in a wreck on his way home
6. His funeral was the biggest I had ever seen
7. Would mine be that big if I died?
8. Would Linda be there? I should ask her...


And more recently (last week, well into allergy season) My husband and I were driving and he was talking about putting some of that canned foam insulation around the windows. After a few seconds, I said "I don't want to die from something respiratory." My husband, somewhat more used to my randomness, did not about wreck, simply asked where that came from. He seems to enjoy hearing about my weird trains of thought.
1. Yeah, I know that stuff
2. They killed a guy on an episode of CSI:NY with that, sprayed it down his throat during a fight
3. That was such a horrible death scenes, one of the few that really bothered me
4. That's kinda what it feels like when I have an asthma attack
5. Crap, I forgot my inhalor!
6. Suffocation would be the worst possible way to die... I really don't want to die like that

If a person doesn't know enough about me to expect things like that it can really freak them out. I try to watch doing that around people who don't understand, but the problem is that I usually don't realize that the other person doesn't hear my little internal dialogue. It makes perfect sense to me, but the other person is completely lost.


That's how I think too! Most of the time even people who know me are like, "Where the crap did that come from??" I'm trying to remember to keep my mouth shut because I almost started a family feud that way (with my husband's family who is not used to me)


_________________
Your Aspie score: 171 of 200
Your Neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 40 of 200


Cafeaulait
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Jul 2012
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,539
Location: Europe

14 Apr 2013, 11:35 am

OK, I´ve seen some nice examples, but no one probably tops mine:

Last year I was a member on a committee of a students associations. We were 8 people. We organized a trip to Iceland for students on the association. On the night of the first presentation, where we had to tell what the destination of trip was gonna be, everyone of the commitee was there. It was in a bar not far from the faculty building. So, we (the committee) had to be there at 20 o clock, to prepar things, but the presentation didnt actually start untill 20.30, when the others members of the association arrived. So after we had finished the preparations we all just sat at a table, or two tables. Everyone was talking to each other and I was just kind of sitting there, I didn't know what to say to them. After a while most went outside to smoke. I remained with two other people, that eventually decided to go chat up to another person that had just entered. So I sat there... A.L.O.N.E. at the table. All I thought was: omg, I'm here alone, everyone is going to think I am weird, crazy, socially akward, autistic. QUICK, I must grab my mobile phone and pretend that I am texting someone. But then I couldn't find my mobile phone. I had forgotten it at home. At that moment I just felt like dying. I just wanted to kill myself. I sat there all alone for like 10 minutes, just staring at the rest, at the table, not knowing what to do. I could see the smokers gossiping about me outside.

This was so afwull.



Last edited by Cafeaulait on 14 Apr 2013, 11:39 am, edited 2 times in total.

Cafeaulait
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Jul 2012
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,539
Location: Europe

14 Apr 2013, 11:36 am

-whoops-



Triple__B
Snowy Owl
Snowy Owl

User avatar

Joined: 29 Jan 2013
Age: 46
Gender: Male
Posts: 141

14 Apr 2013, 12:23 pm

Cafeaulait wrote:
OK, I´ve seen some nice examples, but no one probably tops mine:

Last year I was a member on a committee of a students associations. We were 8 people. We organized a trip to Iceland for students on the association. On the night of the first presentation, where we had to tell what the destination of trip was gonna be, everyone of the commitee was there. It was in a bar not far from the faculty building. So, we (the committee) had to be there at 20 o clock, to prepar things, but the presentation didnt actually start untill 20.30, when the others members of the association arrived. So after we had finished the preparations we all just sat at a table, or two tables. Everyone was talking to each other and I was just kind of sitting there, I didn't know what to say to them. After a while most went outside to smoke. I remained with two other people, that eventually decided to go chat up to another person that had just entered. So I sat there... A.L.O.N.E. at the table. All I thought was: omg, I'm here alone, everyone is going to think I am weird, crazy, socially akward, autistic. QUICK, I must grab my mobile phone and pretend that I am texting someone. But then I couldn't find my mobile phone. I had forgotten it at home. At that moment I just felt like dying. I just wanted to kill myself. I sat there all alone for like 10 minutes, just staring at the rest, at the table, not knowing what to do. I could see the smokers gossiping about me outside.

This was so afwull.


That sort of situation happens to me all the time. I've actually kind of gotten used to it. As a matter of fact, now I usually wait till all the others at the table start meaninglessly chit chatting (often louder and louder to talk over each other) and break out my cell phone to play a game. Doing that passes the time and pretty soon it's time to go. It's a win win situation. They get to engage in the chit chat, and I retreat to my own little world. This also requires you to not give a s**t what they think of you though because occasionally someone in one of the conversations will realize that you are not participating in the chit chat that is going on.


_________________
AQ -48
EQ - 6
Your Aspie score: 164 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 29 of 200
Nothing is permanent in this wicked world. Not even our troubles. ~ Charles Chaplin


kamiyu910
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Dec 2012
Age: 39
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,036
Location: California

14 Apr 2013, 1:21 pm

Cafeaulait wrote:
OK, I´ve seen some nice examples, but no one probably tops mine


I don't know about topping anything, as everyone's reactions to things can be totally different, but the family feud story is actually my worst incident to date and is a good example of completely awkward.
My husband's family is very superstitious, and his cousin was 7 months pregnant at the time. They consider this to be the "safe zone" and felt that it was a good time to name the baby. They chose the exact same name of the baby our friends were going to have, but when she was 7 months pregnant she had a seizure and the baby died. So while the cousin and family were going on about how everything was safe and they could finally stop worrying, I blurted out, "Well our friend was 7 months pregnant and they were going to name the baby Logan too, but then he died." -_-; With the family's track record, I'm still surprised they still talk to me.... The silence after that statement, with everyone staring at me, was enough to make the densest Aspie take notice.

Then there's my dad... he's famous for these things too. He had a friend who had gotten pregnant but had lost the baby. Dad didn't realize and when he next saw her, wanted to say something positive so he told her, "Wow, I think you've started to pop out a bit!" And then she said, "I lost the baby." Cue crying. He's often been that one guy who asks, "When's the baby due?" and they're not pregnant. He swears he's going to never make another comment like that again, but then he does anyway. lol. >_<


_________________
Your Aspie score: 171 of 200
Your Neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 40 of 200


GiantHockeyFan
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 18 Jun 2012
Age: 42
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,293

14 Apr 2013, 3:39 pm

Well someone close to me told me how I'm not longer socially awkward and I asked what they meant by that. He said that I used to creep people out because it was 'obvious' I was trying too hard to be nice, especially to women. I certainly am not aware of that as I always try to treat everyone equally.

Go figure that I know a guy who basically tells girls to "go down" all the time and they complied without hesitation every time, so it's obvious it must be something I am completely unaware of that I was doing.



tomz21
Emu Egg
Emu Egg

User avatar

Joined: 23 Nov 2012
Age: 33
Gender: Male
Posts: 5

14 Apr 2013, 4:21 pm

Hello, Im Tom and I have the same trouble. Being social awkward in my situation is me trying to strike up conversations with random people in the wrong environment. For an example going to the gym and trying to strike up a conversation with people.



Janissy
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 5 May 2009
Age: 58
Gender: Female
Posts: 6,450
Location: x

14 Apr 2013, 5:03 pm

EMTkid wrote:
It can also mean responding in unusual ways in conversation, or saying random strange things. For examples:

At work one day, my partner ant I were driving back from a call discussing what we were going to have for lunch. After a pause for roughly 5 seconds, I said "Would you come to my funeral?" She just about crashed the ambulance, then asked where the hell that came from. To me, it was rather simple.
1. There was nothing to eat in town but the same fast food places we eat at every week
2. our diets in EMS work are pretty unhealthy
3. Actually, the whole lifestyle is fairly rough on the body. Three of our co-workers have had heart problems in the past 4 years
4. And its not like inward threats are the only problem. People fight us, shoot at us, hold us hostage.
5. 24 hour shifts are rough and can affect our ability to drive. Our friend Chris was killed only a year ago in a wreck on his way home
6. His funeral was the biggest I had ever seen
7. Would mine be that big if I died?
8. Would Linda be there? I should ask her...


And more recently (last week, well into allergy season) My husband and I were driving and he was talking about putting some of that canned foam insulation around the windows. After a few seconds, I said "I don't want to die from something respiratory." My husband, somewhat more used to my randomness, did not about wreck, simply asked where that came from. He seems to enjoy hearing about my weird trains of thought.
1. Yeah, I know that stuff
2. They killed a guy on an episode of CSI:NY with that, sprayed it down his throat during a fight
3. That was such a horrible death scenes, one of the few that really bothered me
4. That's kinda what it feels like when I have an asthma attack
5. Crap, I forgot my inhalor!
6. Suffocation would be the worst possible way to die... I really don't want to die like that

If a person doesn't know enough about me to expect things like that it can really freak them out. I try to watch doing that around people who don't understand, but the problem is that I usually don't realize that the other person doesn't hear my little internal dialogue. It makes perfect sense to me, but the other person is completely lost.



I used to do that routinely: have an internal train of thought and then say the last thought aloud, expecting people to know what I meant. People were as absolutely puzzled as they were in your examples. Friends would ask what led up to that ("where did that come from?") and I would tell them the whole internal train of thought. One day a friend said, "don't just give me the caboose. Give me the whole train" (train of thought). So now I do.



daydreamer84
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Jul 2009
Age: 39
Gender: Female
Posts: 5,001
Location: My own little world

14 Apr 2013, 6:54 pm

There's a rhythm to social interactions and conversations. Being off timing and not getting the rhythm results in social awkwardness. Examples
* talking out of turn...when there's supposed to be a pause
* interrupting at the wrong time
*not knowing when to shut up -going on and on too much about a topic/not letting the other person talk
* not knowing when the other person's trying to end a conversation so continuing it

The above is what I think of as social awkwardness. Also you could include awkward mannerisms.
* weird facial expressions - try to fake smile and look creepy/ try to make eye contact and stare intently so look creepy or no facial expression/not enough.
* weird body language/ talk a lot with hands but not the way normal people do/more like just waving arms in front of face in an awkward looking way or no gestures
* weird prosody -too high too raspy, too loud , too quiet, too much enunciation or no or not enough inflection or too fast or too slow
* not making eye contact/ making too much (staring)/making weird eye contact like looking at one person while talking to another, too much looking at and then away from people ect.
*startling and jumping when someone touches you

There are also things like hesitating and not knowing what to do because you don't know whether to follow the other person or say goodbye and walk off on your own (like someone else mentioned-I do that too). So many things it could refer to...jus being socially off.