What characteristics would you like to have?
If I could pick and choose characteristics... I'd want to appear charismatic and confident to others. Speaking clearly and concisely to people would be the jackpot. I notice when one types, you have more time to 'think' replies; it's a poor reflection of person to person communication. I get nervous, start talking quickly and jumble up my meanings often. Distance studying with uni means I have less group practice than on-campus students, but if I do eventually go ahead to take my masters in 2 years time, which I will do at a 'brick' uni as the term goes, I will need all the charisma I can muster.
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On hiatus thanks to someone in real life breaching my privacy here, without my permission! May be back one day. +tips hat+
JakeASD wrote:
I would like to be a witty, well-spoken and altruistic individual, who has an excellent memory and extensive knowledge on a wide range of subjects. Unfortunately I am the antithesis of the aforementioned characteristics, for I am self-centered, withdrawn, I stumble over my words and I possess a lack of knowledge on most things because of my learning difficulties (autism, possible dyslexia and I suspect ADD and APD, too).
Lack of knowledge can be a great thing in a conversation. Say "I don't know much about that but I've always wanted to know" and you've got a great conversation going. People *love* to be able to talk about their own stuff. Look intrested, nod your head. It works for me.
Claradoon wrote:
JakeASD wrote:
I would like to be a witty, well-spoken and altruistic individual, who has an excellent memory and extensive knowledge on a wide range of subjects. Unfortunately I am the antithesis of the aforementioned characteristics, for I am self-centered, withdrawn, I stumble over my words and I possess a lack of knowledge on most things because of my learning difficulties (autism, possible dyslexia and I suspect ADD and APD, too).
Lack of knowledge can be a great thing in a conversation. Say "I don't know much about that but I've always wanted to know" and you've got a great conversation going. People *love* to be able to talk about their own stuff. Look intrested, nod your head. It works for me.
Thanks for the advice. Dale Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and Influence People" states something similar. Unfortunately I am rather selfish as I always feel disappointed in myself for failing to remember what others have said. Thus I end up learning nothing at all. But I guess I should feel satisfied if the other person is happy about telling me something about their interests.
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"Every day, once a day, give yourself a present. Don't plan it, don't wait for it, just let it happen. " - Special Agent Dale Cooper, Twin Peaks
JakeASD wrote:
Claradoon wrote:
JakeASD wrote:
I would like to be a witty, well-spoken and altruistic individual, who has an excellent memory and extensive knowledge on a wide range of subjects. Unfortunately I am the antithesis of the aforementioned characteristics, for I am self-centered, withdrawn, I stumble over my words and I possess a lack of knowledge on most things because of my learning difficulties (autism, possible dyslexia and I suspect ADD and APD, too).
Lack of knowledge can be a great thing in a conversation. Say "I don't know much about that but I've always wanted to know" and you've got a great conversation going. People *love* to be able to talk about their own stuff. Look intrested, nod your head. It works for me.
Thanks for the advice. Dale Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and Influence People" states something similar. Unfortunately I am rather selfish as I always feel disappointed in myself for failing to remember what others have said. Thus I end up learning nothing at all. But I guess I should feel satisfied if the other person is happy about telling me something about their interests.
I'm not trying to say you'll learn anything. That's not the point. It's only that you'll pay attention and nod and so on. Whether you retain any of it doesn't matter. It's that people crave being paid attention to. They can be talking about anything, and somebody pays attention - they're not trying to teach, there's no test. I think it was Jung that said, "Most people live out their lives saying 'Nobody saw me' and 'Nobody heard me.'"
That's a great gift you can give - pay attention, see a person, hear them. It's not about learning at all. I do hope you'll try it.
I suddenly remember where I got that idea. Barbara Walters wrote a book a zillion years ago and she said the best thing you can do in a conversation is know absolutely nothing but be interested.
https://www.amazon.ca/Talk-Practically- ... ra+walters