ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo wrote:
SammichEater wrote:
ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo wrote:
That's what I tell myself. I try to give them the benefit of the doubt but I do wonder if the smile has anything to do with me. Maybe they saw me and think I look comical, and since it's rude to stare, they don't but they can't stifle the sardonic grin or something.
I am hoping someone reading this will say they do that when they see someone they think looks ridiculous but don't want to do the obvious staring thing so I'll know it's not my imagination.
If I had a quarter for every time I've been accused of this, I'd never have to work a day in my life.
You really don't know how wrong you are. As much as I hate talking to people, it always makes me smile. Not in a good way, but in a creepy way like you've described. Sometimes I'll try to look away to hide it, but that's all I can do.
But these people aren't talking. It just annoys me because I don't know why they are doing it. I confuse their smiles with the smiles of people who have ridiculed me in the past. It's the same type of smile. Honestly, I would prefer to be scowled at than to see the confusing grins. At least there is no uncertainty about the meaning of scowls.
Actually, you would be surprised...there is a look of contempt, scorn, disgust, anger, irritation, and you can also have facial paralysis which makes it hard to do anything other than show one single emotion.
There was an episode of House one time where he was stuck in an airport with Cuddy and a woman was sneering at her coffee which was an effect of some ridiculously obscure ailment (as usual it wasn't Lupus), then House mentioned she didn't have all that long to live...
There are of course many other expressions, but they are the main five "bad" ones, the ones most likely to get you in trouble if you are in a pub full of rival football fans :p
~~
I am a great believer in asking people directly whats up, if they are grinning from ear to ear I will comment on it in some innocuous way such as, "you look happy, has your girlfriend said "yes"?
" Of course you have to judge this for yourself, every situation is different.
This is a disarming statement/question and is the one most likely not to raise their ire.
Of course the other option is to throw a shopping trolley at their head demanding they quit it.
Last edited by Sparhawke on 21 Aug 2011, 6:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.