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by FPGAhacker
2836 days ago
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Yeah, basically this. I personally don’t like people asking me a lot of questions, and so for a long time I assumed this was generally true. Apparently it isn’t. People like to talk about their lives. I guess my main reason for not liking people asking me questions is how their eyes glaze over and they start fidgeting when I answer. Maybe it’s me. I find it pretty annoying so I give terse answers or deflect in one way or another. But other people do like personal questions it seems. And I admit, it helps build relationships. I guess my problem is I just am not that curious about people I’ve just met. It would be pretty rare for me to give a shit about what you do for a living, and so if I ask, it’ll be my eyes glazing over. But I do make the effort anyway, particularly if I get the feeling that someone is a talker. |
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I wonder if you (and I) sometimes fail to recognize when the person asking those questions is actually communicating something different (e.g., they want to become more friendly with you). But we fail to recognize that they're using a cultural idiom to do so.
A neuro-psychologist has told me that based on some testing I've had done, there's a decent chance I'd also test positive for Asperger's. And this kind of focusing on the literal without noticing that it pattern-matches a different, idiomatic interpretation would make sense for a person with Asperger's.
It reminds me of that line from the song What a Wonderful World, "I see friends shaking hands saying how do you do They're really saying I love you."
If that's what's really going on, perhaps the number of questions you're getting can seem less onerous?