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especially with Trevor and PG Tips. very godly wouldn't do without. |
... on your knees - weeding with nobody nearby to bother you.
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QOTD ![]() Do You Talk Too Much? DO YOU TALK TOO MUCH? |
do I?
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MAYBE ![]() the mona lisa |
.FALSE.
.FALSE. unless when talking to specific people (granny, my two best friends) particularly when I haven't for a while .FALSE. unless see above .TRUE. .FALSE. .FALSE. .FALSE. |
1. false
2. false 3. very true. I pass the time ordering things in my head and paying just enough attention to get the gist while the other guy's blathering on. 4. very true. Anyone who complains about detail orientation probably doesn't read DFW, either. So? 5. false. I have "back routes" that I take at work when I want to avoid being buttonholed for conversation every five steps. 6. false. The people who know me best have never called me that, but perhaps if they knew me better, they would. 7. false. Failing to attend to this skill set = the end of my livelihood. |
1. You think of yourself as a talker rather than a listener.
neither 2. In conversation, your utterances frequently exceed one minute in length. (This is the most important indicator that you talk too much.) hardly ever 3. You are able to come up with many ideas on the fly, so you want to express them all in one fell swoop. occasionally 4. You’re detail-oriented. People who are detail-oriented often include details that seem important to them but bore the pants off the typical listener. no 5. People at their workspaces tend to look away from you when you walk by. (They’re afraid you’ll come over and bend their ear for 10 minutes.) no 6. The people who know you best have called you self-absorbed, narcissistic, oblivious, selfish, or egocentric. Nobody has ever called me that. Although I think it's true. A conversation is about sharing and paying attention to your conversation partner’s needs. What a load of bullsh*t. Conversation is sharing ideas, not about the partner's needs. 7. You don’t stay alert for a sign that your listener wishes you’d shut up: eyes wandering more than 1/3 of the time (or the opposite, staring frozen at you), finger or toe tapping, frequently interrupting you, a body position that suggests the person is trying to get away from you, frequently saying “uh-huh” as if urging you to get on with it. Yes, some listeners are impatient by nature, but if you observe such reactions from more than one-fourth of the people you converse with, the problem is more likely you. Normally I do very little talking. I only listen when I find it's worth the effort. |
no
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Sometimes. I always try to pay attention to body language though. If I see someone zoning out, I'll change the topic.
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SUHT UP! |
nah, but I bore the pants off people describing my disturbing dreams.
everyone's got faults, man - lay off :mad: |
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