Chimchar wrote:
Sora wrote:
Why not walk away, claim you must do something right now and avoid the conversation? Since they obviously want to talk about it and they outvote you, you have little chance to change it. People just have different priorities and like different stuff. You could walk away to avoid them getting on your nerves. Or even better, single out one and pull them into conversation you think of as more interesting.
I couldn't do it, if I'm in a classroom. Which is loud, something I can't stand in a classroom. Yeah, they always do that. I don't know why. They are talking about something that isn't school-appropriate, and the teacher just sits there, possibly helpless. I almost smashed the school laptop because they won't shut up.
In the middle of the lesson? Don't the teachers... teach? Sorry, I was the under impression that this happened when everybody was really free ta talk = free to walk away = free to do whatever they want to do.
Now, if that's the case I dare say there's nothing you can do about it. You could only try to keep yourself occupied with something more reasonable. Homework? And then ignore the bunch, as you cannot possibly miss out on something important if the teacher does nothing productive.
I've just learned to ignore (like, ignoring truly everybody, students, teachers, principal haha). Unless you can manage to stir the conversation away from this topic and towards another, I can't think of how to change this situation.
The alternative I know and the one which I have practising for years is, to interfere with something rude and ignorant enough to make everybody else speechless. A thesis that is so horrible that everybody will want to speak against it. But this way is not at all a good advice, unless you want to get on everybody's bad list or, even worse, get send to the principle's office. If you take it to extremes.
So, I'm voting for learning to ignore senseless chatter.
Or change the course of the conversation in a well behaved way. That's what I always did. But you must want to talk, get involved and then know exactly whose buttons to push and by how much to not give off an impression of rudeness.
No doubt, there's no easy answer to this issue.
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Autism + ADHD
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The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it. Terry Pratchett