i_wanna_blue wrote:
Well, I usually fail in two ways. (Or at least I think it's a fail). The first scenario is I engage in the usual pleasantries, and thereafter the awkward silence comes about. Nothing is being said all of a sudden. Now I start to panic. Am I supposed to be saying something? What am I supposed to ask?
If I just keep quiet, is it wrong? Usually I'll be so engrossed at thinking what to do, I won't do anything, and I'll come across as awkward and clumsy.
The second scenario is rarer but just as difficult. I will decide to make contact with the person. It's almost as if I'm just wanting to get it over and done with. I become twitchy and greet the person with an almost rehearsed feeling. The truth is, it is rehearsed (in my head), and it doesn't come about as natural. I start saying things that I have already rehearsed which usually goes against the flow of the conversation. My part is almost mechanical. And usually I leave a very strange impression of my self.
Yes, I experienced the first scenario earlier today and it is quite common for me. I saw someone I know out shopping and waved to them. They walked up to me and said something like "Are you alright?" I replied "Yes" thinking I was doing okay, but I couldn't think of anything else to say. I tried asking them the same question, but it came out as an incoherent noise and then they turned red, gave me a friendly tap to the shoulder and walked off.
But the thing is, even though it was incredibly awkward and slightly embarrassing, it still felt worth it. As well as not ignoring them I had been shown both interest and affection by this acquaintance of mine. So this actually made me feel better about myself. I may not be able to hold a conversation for longer than a few seconds, but people know me as a kind person so some of them choose to like me anyway.
I don't know, maybe things like this have different values to different people. To me those awkward social situations are a part of my personality that I have accepted and maybe even grown to like a little bit. People don't seem to mind how well socialize, just as long as you show interest in others and appear happy to see them.
Last edited by MajorTom on 05 Sep 2009, 1:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.