comatt1 wrote:
I have a difficult reading sarcasm, so I have been practicing; my trouble is, while I remain totally gullible, every time I try to be sarcastic, people see me as lying.
That part where "they get it" never seems to happen, and I don't know if I am supposed to say, just kidding or something. Like, I once said I was bitten by a shark and it went away with one testicle, to a good friend, and he thought I was serious. and proceeded to call me a liar after asking my mom..
I live in wisconsin, it seems completely improbable that truth was ever my intention.
So does Sarcasm have some articulating component I am missing?
In short, yes. A lot of the meaning is conveyed in the way something is said. It is generally clear when someone is being sarcastic not by what they have said but by the way they have said it. An example but there are many is when you stress the vowels in words. Such as I'm reeeeeeeeeealy sorry, said in a slightly monotone way.
I'm not sure if what you said is actually sarcasm because it was not immediately obvious that it was sarcasm, and therefore a lie. Saying something like, "it's so busy in here" when there is only a couple of people is clearly sarcastic because everyone can observe that what has been said is not consistent with the truth.