Can you do small talk well?
I just can't. I don't naturally share what I have been doing with others, it just doesn't inspire me. I don't have much interest in hearing what others have been doing or sharing what I have been doing (which usually isn't much).
This.
I get irritated by small talk, especially when people keep asking me questions, where I give one-word answers, and it's obvious that I don't have anything to say. I guess the reason I hate small talk is that I don't have anything to say. And I would rather keep my mouth shut, than bore people with stuff they don't want to hear, such as my interests. Why can't people leave me the hell alone!! !
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Reality is a nice place but I wouldn't want to live there
I have an easier time talking to people about "deep" things such as religion (as long as it remains respectful), philosophy....etc.
This is how I am. I'll cover all the basics then I'm out of material.
I have the added bonus that I'm just not interested in much of anything NTs will talk about. Guys will talk on and on about sports and women talk about people/gossip or television. Once any one of these topics come up I have nothing to add. I know I can be more sociable, if only people weren't so g*ddamed boring. It rarely happens.
I used to talk about the weather a lot because it's a special interest but even the weather is mostly uninteresting to me these days.
Some days I can, some days I can't, it depends on whether I feel like being around people or not. I've picked up the small talk skills by observing other people and I can be quite good at it, but I don't particularly enjoy doing it. I've never really seen the point, it's a waste of time in my eyes. But then it's better than an awkward silence.
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The only person in the world that can truly make you happy is yourself.
heliocopters
Pileated woodpecker
Joined: 20 Aug 2009
Age:27
Posts: 189
Location: American side of Lake Ontario
I was diagnosed in one day, and I figured out why two weeks later. He tried to make small talk with me and I failed completely. For example:
Dr. Some Guy PhD: "I like your necklace."
Me: "Oh, um, thank you."
Dr. Some Guy PhD: "I have a celtic knot, too." (points to his ring)
Me: "Oh, uh, that's um, nice."
A little later:
Dr. PhD guy: "Your jacket is very colorful."
Me: "Ah, yes. It is...colorful. Thank you. For...pointing out how colorful...my jacket is....
I'm a disaster. I can usually get around small talk by making fun of myself and making people laugh. Sometimes it just comes out desperate, though.
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I am the wise little owl in the linden trees near the water.
Wow, I thought it was just me. (I'm undiagnosed, but suspect I have it as well as my son) I hate small talk, hate it! What is the point... Hi how are you, (you lie back and say fine even if you are not) and then what? ugh. I really hate it. Completely pointless. I have tried to continue on to other subjects, and then people just stare at me, like I'm the loony.
Nice to know, others feel the same.
PaganMom
Sea Gull
Joined: 4 Nov 2009
Age:51
Posts: 218
Location: Middle Of Nowhere, BFE, The Deep South
I can do it pretty good, but don't like to unless I'm somewhere like stuck in a waiting room etc without reading material. Then I'll talk to other people. The key is when they ask you something that the answer to is "Yes" is to make it sound like your saying more than that. "Yes, oh yes." Or you can turn your answer into a question for them.
Them "Did you see the new movie <insert whatevers new>?"
You "No, I haven't have you?"
Them "Not yet"
You "Well I hear it's good (or bad) I'd be interested in hearing what you think about it"
ALWAYS turn it back on them. If somebody shows you an item of theirs, ask where they got it, but NOT how much it was unless you know them really well or you are my age and can get by with playing the part of 'nosey old lady"
"Fine, how you been?" is good for "How are you" BUT "coming down with a little cold" is also pretty good in social situations and that will also get them to back off and leave you alone so they don't catch it.
I tend to get to talking and then just say too much. Stuff that when I think back about it I REALlY DONT WANT that person to know about me. But it's ok.
So my answer is yes I can.
Pagan Mom
I love you people......my people! You can't imagine how liberating it is to hear a lot of others saying out loud all those thoughts I kept inside my head for so many years. These kinds of opinions are just not "right" in the NT world where the greatest good is to be interested in other people and connect. It's not so bad to say"I'm not very good at small talk". That is forgiven as being humble or realistic. What's really far out is to hear some of you telling it the way it is: that I'm not interested in what they(NT) have to say! I find most social chit-chat banal, boring and just a formula for filling in time. I can do it if I have to because it can all be memorized, but I usually can't be bothered or I feel dishonest about doing it. What I enjoy really is to talk about something-- a topic or have a discussion/debate about a topic.
You "No, I haven't have you?"
Them "Not yet"
You "Well I hear it's good (or bad) I'd be interested in hearing what you think about it"
ALWAYS turn it back on them. If somebody shows you an item of theirs, ask where they got it, but NOT how much it was unless you know them really well or you are my age and can get by with playing the part of 'nosey old lady"
"Fine, how you been?" is good for "How are you" BUT "coming down with a little cold" is also pretty good in social situations and that will also get them to back off and leave you alone so they don't catch it.
Wow, this is a really helpful example for me. I hope it will help make any future bouts of in person small talk less excruciating.
As far as social networking sites go, surprisingly enough, I'm on all of them (sometimes as myself, mostly for work related purposes).
The social networking accounts I use for myself allow me to interact with various family members and acquaintences on my own terms and allow me to cut down on the number of phone calls and in person visits I have to endure.
For me, small talk is far easier if there's no face time factor.
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?How I wish that somewhere there existed an island for those who are wise and of good will.?--Albert Einstein
INTJ.
Nope. I can go for a couple of minutes, but then it becomes real awkward.
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My fellow Americans. As a young boy, I dreamed of being a baseball; but tonight I say, we must move forward, not backward; upward, not forward; and always twirling, twirling, twirling towards freedom!
Do not sweat the small talk topic
What to do (Aspie to the rescue): Introduction Scenario in a Career Centre Office
Person: My name is Louise. (True)
Me: That is my cat's name! (True)
Person: Here is the form to fill out. (I fill it out) The end date is December 31, 2009 (True)
Me: Hey! That is my son's birthday! All my kids were born on a Tuesday! (True)
Person: Amazing.
Me: Do you have kids?
Person: One daughter, grown up.
Me: Nice when they have grown up. They can still visit! And you can visit them.
Person: Yes. During holidays. (End of conversation)
The trick is to focus on one thing they have said and go from there. Do not make it last too long, and then say thanks, goodbye, see you again (if you have to). (I had to fill out a form for employment supports.) Do not get emotionally involved, and you will be ok. This is my recipe for small talk.
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Radiant Aspergian
Awe-Tistic Whirlwind
Phuture Phounder of the Philosophy Phactory
NOT a believer of Mystic Woo-Woo
I can do really basic small talk, since I have to at work. And I'll generally add things in to manipulate it into a topic that I'm familliar with.
Catching up with friends is something that I'm uncomfortable and awkward with. I have lost quite a few friends because of this (seeing classmates from high school sucks on so many levels). I never know what to say, or what to ask them. I moved to another city half a year ago, went back for a wedding, and all of my former friends were there. I felt very overwhelmed. So, now they think I'm a jerk because I didn't talk to any of them.
I can make small-talk, but I often forget. I'll find myself sitting alone in a room with someone & then realize that we've been sitting for 5-10 minutes with no one saying anything (I was enjoying the silence - but they might have been thinking "what a rude, stuck-up person!")
My mother once told me that if two people are sitting in a room, it's the responsibility of the older of the two to start the small-talk. I've reached an age where that is often me. :/
My limit on small-talk is usually a few minutes - although sometimes the small-talk turns into an actual conversation, so then I can talk a long time.
As with the OP, my real problem is developing friendships & keeping them going. I suppose there is a small-talk component, as you are getting to know each other - especially the first dozen-or-so times you meet. The small-talk process facilitates the exchange of information that allows two people to decide whether they can be friends. As the small-talk continues, more & more actual information is exchanged. I often wish we could just do it in writing - it would be so much more efficient! (But apparently, that's unacceptable - NT people need to have the buffer of all that trivial chit-chat to feel comfortable.)
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"I am likely to miss the main event, if I stop to cry & complain again.
So I will keep a deliberate pace - Let the damn breeze dry my face."
- Fiona Apple - "Better Version of Me"
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