tooshytosay
Well-known member
To me, it really is like that. Unless someone asks me a direct question which demands an answer, it never "occurs" to me speak anything, at all.
Literally, if the other person could, I would let the other person speak for on and on and on and on and I'll be fine with that. It would never occur to me that I should say something. I'll be like "why say something when the other person hasn't asked me a question?"
But I've been observing how normal people interact lately and it's not like that for them. Normal, naturally-flowing, casual conversations have little DIRECT questioning. People somehow seem to take "cues" from eachother and automatically "know" when to speak. They don't need an explicit question to hand over the speaker's baton. It just happens.
I don't know, I just can't seem to do that. Unless a person explicitly hands over the speaking right to me via a direct question followed by a silence, I would just have no urge to speak at all.
And unfortunately, because of this, most conversations I have end up becoming "interrogations" - the other person, if they realise the above just spit-fires questions at me, and I answer those questions as if I was in an exam. As you can imagine such talks feel hardly natural at all, and I would feel very guilty because the other person is doing all the "work" with coming up with all the questions - and I would literally just feel like an answerphone.
Or, the conversation becomes an extreme one-way street. The other person does 99.9% of the talking. Then at the end, they'll ask, "why don't you say anything?" I'll be like, "er, because you've been talking and I didn't want to interrupt you?"
Literally, if the other person could, I would let the other person speak for on and on and on and on and I'll be fine with that. It would never occur to me that I should say something. I'll be like "why say something when the other person hasn't asked me a question?"
But I've been observing how normal people interact lately and it's not like that for them. Normal, naturally-flowing, casual conversations have little DIRECT questioning. People somehow seem to take "cues" from eachother and automatically "know" when to speak. They don't need an explicit question to hand over the speaker's baton. It just happens.
I don't know, I just can't seem to do that. Unless a person explicitly hands over the speaking right to me via a direct question followed by a silence, I would just have no urge to speak at all.
And unfortunately, because of this, most conversations I have end up becoming "interrogations" - the other person, if they realise the above just spit-fires questions at me, and I answer those questions as if I was in an exam. As you can imagine such talks feel hardly natural at all, and I would feel very guilty because the other person is doing all the "work" with coming up with all the questions - and I would literally just feel like an answerphone.
Or, the conversation becomes an extreme one-way street. The other person does 99.9% of the talking. Then at the end, they'll ask, "why don't you say anything?" I'll be like, "er, because you've been talking and I didn't want to interrupt you?"