What is your most common social mistake?
1. Like a lot of people said, not knowing when I'm supposed to follow someone
2. Having absolutely nothing to say in response to someone
3. Not knowing when to say "hello" or "bye" to someone
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After a time, you may find that having is not so pleasing a thing, after all, as wanting. It is not logical, but it is often true.
--Spock
how about taking a back seat to every conversation. no one seems to be interested if I am "leading" a conversation. then, usually, they think i'm interested in what they're talking about. And, of course, it is followed by me putting my actual thoughts into it, and the inevitable crickets follow right on cue. most conversations are like a dance that I never received the dance steps.
So, usually people will approach me and start talking, then realize they want nothing to do with me five minutes later. It's nothing offensive that I say (I think) but it probably is not the typical chit chat formalities that are usually accepted.
Side question: Anybody wonder why people ask for your number and then never call? It's like they seem interested in you at first, but want nothing to do with you.
1) Greeting people, not knowing whether or how to appropriately greet someone. Not knowing if its ok to say a comment or 2, or what to say back when someone says a brief comment.
2) Social timing, not knowing when to insert a comment when people are talking. I swear, my social timing sucks so badly that probably most aspies surpass me with this one.
This is the reason why I make a crap ass acquaintance. Its funny how I find it easier to hold conversation then say hi to someone. I can perform more advanced social interaction better then things that are considered basic.
The following thing is really confusing sometimes, especially if someone has unwittingly "trained" you in a certain way. My sister used to make me follow her around & fawn all over her when we went places. A couple of times when I did my own thing she left me there. Almost like you would punish a dog. So once when a friend I'd never hung out solo with before invited me shopping I followed him all over the store for a few minutes. He informed me that I could go look at whatever I wanted & meet up with him after while looking at me oddly. So I explained to him why I did that. We never hung out solo again.
I have done that too. I used to hold doors all the time at stores to be polite but then a couple of elderly people yelled at me (on separate occasions) for holding it for them, "I can do it myself!" is what they yelled. Now I usually only do it if someone is coming up right behind me.
Most people don't complain about this anymore with me (of course I don't talk as much either) but when I was in school (before HS & still had friends) a couple would get really angry with me. "Why are you using that word? Are you trying to say I'm stupid?". Of course I wasn't, those are just the words that come naturally to me sometimes.
I have been told that I am too loud when I am excited and start talking about something (with family). Then I clam up and get angry because I feel like I am being real (which I can rarely be) and they are punishing me for it.
My big thing right now is that I never know what to do when I show up at my therapist's office. Sometimes she's on the phone chatting, or on her computer, not in the office yet or in the other building. So I hang by the door or go sit in the waiting room but then it's like she doesn't know I'm there. Then when she finally comes to find me she chastises me for not letting her know that I'm there. Like I would do that.
I have trouble smiling and being natural as I'm paranoid about appearing to be fake, but can't find a balance between being "friendly" which requires smiling and being phony. I don't have a natural smile that I am comfortable with, I always feel like there is something wrong with my teeth so I shouldn't show them (even though I know my teeth are fine). I find that when I am in groups and people are smiling or laughing at jokes that I should smile and laugh too, even though I don't want to. But sometimes I just can't be bothered and keep a straight face, which I know is a mistake.
I really understand about the small talk. I just can't stand it. Every now and then I'll engage in a conversation (for the other person's sake) but most of the time, I won't bother. After I say 'hi' to my aunt, for example, there's just dead silence. I do my best to laugh along with others in a group when something is funny (or at least when something is suppose to be; my sense of humor is odd compared to my family members), but sometimes I just don't care to join in. Forcing myself to behave "appropriately" in social interactions is tiring.
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~KC
passionatebach
Velociraptor
Joined: 8 Nov 2009
Age: 46
Gender: Male
Posts: 447
Location: Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Kind of goes along with clinginess, but knowing how much is too much to interact with someone. I sometimes wonder if I am posting too much on a friend's wall, calling too much, etc. Also, being flighty around those people whom I really enjoy their company.
I know some people will differ with me on this, but being my authentic self. I used to try to act normal, crack jokes, be funny, etc, but it was more of a turn off to people, than actually being the person that I am. This seems to be the case as I get older, especially with people that I only talk to once in awhile. They want to hear what you are up to, interested in or your life experiences, not the same jokes that they have heard dozens of times before.
I guess I have 3 big ones:
1. Not knowing when to follow someone or stay put
2. Being too quiet (I assume people don't want to talk to me unless they sort of invite me into the conversation)
3. If I have to talk to someone I'm not familiar with and they start really looking me in the face, I start to trip over my words. People that I have to give more than one-word answers to (doctors, professors, etc). Other people I'm comfortable enough that I can look places other than their face while I talk.
_________________
After a time, you may find that having is not so pleasing a thing, after all, as wanting. It is not logical, but it is often true.
--Spock
AngelKnight
Veteran
Joined: 3 May 2011
Age: 47
Gender: Male
Posts: 749
Location: This is not my home; I'm just passing through
Being sociable at a meal is tough. I'm relatively okay when there's small nibbles and such around, but sitting and eating food for more than 5 minutes at a time is when the Inner Me gets grumpy at people who try to have a conversation with me. Inner Me keeps going, "doggoneit, I'm eating! Come back later!"
i guess the thing that alienates other people from me the most is the fact that i fail to listen to what they have to say to me, and i proceed to tell them what i want to tell them, and then after i have finished talking (if they are still there), i excuse my self by telling them "goodbye" in a way that they can not refute.
i do not adequately see people as living things. i know they are alive and all, but me and them have a hard time doing a "mental tango" together.
i just do not care enough to try to involve myself in the social matrix of "peopledom". it all seems pointless to me, and i quickly lose interest when i am forced to listen to someone else talk about things i have not ever thought about myself. i can not "explore" with them.. i care only about what i think.
that is not a socially beneficial way to be i would correctly suspect.so i guess it is a major flaw in me.
"ho f*cking hum".
WhoKnowsWhy
Snowy Owl
Joined: 27 Jul 2011
Age: 35
Gender: Male
Posts: 132
Location: Virginia, United States
My main problem is that I seem to talk down to everyone, or at least that is what would be apparent based on other people's reactions to my social actions. Just because I don't grin like the Cheshire Cat 24/7 and say things "as they are" instead of acting like a clown by consistent streams of sarcasm and other NT humour, people think of me as being "too serious" and not having any sense of humour.
I often just say what I feel like. In the past few years I've been developing a theory of mind, but often I say something having absolutely no idea how the person I'm speaking will respond. Sometimes I unintentionally hurt people, which leads to trouble. In recent years I've been developing a theory of mind so that happens less and less over time, but I still have to be careful.
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