Mootoo wrote:
Not sure if I'm alone in feeling like I *just cannot* handle them... I mean, what's the point in asking a random person the interviewer doesn't know "what will you offer our company?
" - I know the interview is supposed to be about first impressions, getting to know a potential employee... but a rehashed templated answer is knowing jack feces, quite frankly.
I just still cannot handle it even if all I have to do is memorize some good-sounding nonsense and eject it again at the right moment - maybe it's because I don't do drama. And I hate lying. (Oh, but of course, "I will offer you the truth!" is the last answer to that question they want to hear, haha.)
I didn't realise it was autism related, but I have always found it practically impossible to answer vague questions like this.
Even if I had all of the information they could ever possibly desire, without knowing specifically what piece of information they want me to give them, I just can't think of where to begin. It feels similar to what I expect it would feel like to be asked to tell someone absolutely everything you know, about every subject you've ever heard of. RIGHT NOW, ALL IN 5 MINUTES.
And I don't just mean in an interview, but in any question which has no guiding structure.
If asked what I like, for example, I'd need to know which area of my interests they were enquiring about. Are they asking me which movies I like? Which foods? What? And then what genre of movies do they mean? Do they want to know about savoury foods, or desserts? Maybe it's about what I like to eat while watching movies? But then that just presents me with the same mysteries about genre again...
There must be a literally infinite number of potential answers to questions like this. It's impossible to tackle them.
It's no wonder that NTs all just pretend to like the same thing. It must be easier when you keep your list of interests and beliefs short and simple, and rehearse it until it's memorized by heart.