Agreed. Though some of us may consider being fully present in small talk to be a contradiction in terms.I have to be fully present in small talk or l come across as not caring, or rude or whatever.
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Agreed. Though some of us may consider being fully present in small talk to be a contradiction in terms.I have to be fully present in small talk or l come across as not caring, or rude or whatever.
Maybe l mask being present, who truly knows?Agreed. Though some of us may consider being fully present in small talk to be a contradiction in terms.
Anyone have the tendency to make people feel patronised unintentionally?
Most of the time I'm just making conversation and I'll say something and they assume im trying to teach them or something when I know they probably know, i'm just making conversation.
Like just now when I was talking with someone about why she prefers cats and I said you can't leave a dog on its own and they replied "yeah, obviously"
Honestly it's easier going back to being mute and not try. Or just talk to nerds.
Or which one doesn't bite you ;-)Here's how to tell if your spouse or you dog loves you more:
Lock them both in a closet for 2 hours. When you open the door, see which one is the happiest to see you.
Or just talk to nerds.
This has always been a major problem for me. I know I can be dense about things, but still it seems that some things are so obvious as to be plain to all. Or, how could they function without knowing such and such.My long time autistic friend started doing that about 10 years ago, with a twist. I will be saying something obscure, and then back up to explain and he'll harshly cut me off with "I'm not stupid!". Yet when I assume he does know something obscure, he'll cut me off with "How am I supposed to know that?" It's very frustrating, and frankly it has led to me responding only and not initiating conversations with him.
In the mind probably, not in the body though. Im very anxious and uptight inside.Lol!
Yeah, I apparently come off this way unless I'm just nerding out with someone else who does the same thing. Sometimes even my very positive excitement gets mistaken for hostility or microagressions. I don't get it, but this definitely doesn't seem to be a thing when I'm just grooving with someone who's on my wavelength.
Just out of curiosity, would you consider yourself to be a high-energy person?
Better results for me. Both in the technical workplace and in the church, there is a common aversion to revealing your level of understanding unless you feel you are above average. Which builds a wall hard to hurdle for a social catastrophe like me. With an open student and just a few questions, it’s pretty easy to deduce knowledge and experience. So I would pin the tail on the least common denominator and spiral-method as high as they needed to go.Assessing what level of information the other person in a conversation can understand is an essential skill in communication. The faster and more accurately you can do it the better.
I think it has a formal name among specialists who study stuff like that.
IMO it's a characteristic of ASD that we all have a deficit in this area.
FWIW it's literally what I had in mind when I made posts #16 and #18 for @thejuice
* Testing with scenarios are a way to augment whatever native skill someone has in this area. It's a quick way to contextualize, but it takes quite a lot of practice to build up a set of "patterns" to test with. I think NTs do this as children.
* Tracking how people open and/or frame a statement is a technique that can be used in the same space, but it addresses a slightly different aspect.
@The Pandector
Teaching doesn't induce "reflexive pushback" for the same reason young children accept input from adults they know and trust. It's most a one-way flow of information from "more knowledge" to "less knowledge".
The threshold for being considered "patronizing" is much higher.
IMO Aspies are relatively good at teaching, especially technical subjects. I recognize the approach you describe in your post - IMO it leads to significantly better results.
I believe that the theme of social hierarchies is something truly fascinating. Everything around us is a fractal, and society is no exception. I had formulated a theory on this topic and even painted it in the end— "social gravity." I've written other theories, but I haven't painted them yet.Turning the omelette that's a good one!
Some people just want their place in the social hierarchy 'Up Armoured' rather than risking vulnerability and maybe learning something. Like you inferred, pride comes before a fall.
I've found that with doctors, if I share anything about my personal experience or something that helped me get well which might not ally with their textbooks or practice, they are NOT interested one bit. The Doctor patient relationship is a very rigid authority/ subordinate dynamic. I guess they earned it and they haven't the time but still I like to think everyone has something you can learn from.