| Have you ever been in a room with someone trying to change the subject you are deep
in thought about? Two things happen: A) you don't notice, and B) they might start trying to find new tactics if they are still willing to engage at all. I speak from a good deal of experience with this. Active listening was a good crutch for me in a lot of ways, but it works very poorly with people more and more often these days (especially online) and by the time you reach texting and forum posting, you basically just have to read walls of text before you can respond. I hate to say it but sometimes I just need to interrupt you! Same goes the other way. Please, PLEASE, chime in with some reverb or retaliation. (Hell, maybe one day I'll earn a slap on the back ;) Then you have the next problem. It spirals... like a positive feedback loop. You find yourself in a thrilling conversation/argument with someone only to have completely alienated the rest of the room. Now what? Is anyone else even paying attention? Would they have liked to, but you both just flew past them and dove straight into your threads? I think this stuff is insanely hard in the real world sometimes, and only harder online. I like HN partially just because I feel like a lot of people here kinda get that. P.S. I'm also the kind of person who types really long emails, then spends a while trying to edit them down. Sometimes I just don't have the energy. Sorry for the hypocrisy. |
I'm open to this criticism I'm just not entirely sure I'm correctly interpreting you. (It certainly wouldn't be the first time I was told I was unclear or long-winded.)
I don't mean to speak out of turn, but just to offer you information, your experience really reminds me of how friends have described ADHD to me. I'm just putting that out there in case it's useful, make as much or as little of it as you care to.