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Social Ineptness

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  • #40080
    Ben
    Participant

    Hello. I apologise in advance for any rambles I may find myself in here…

    I don’t know how common a dilemma this is amongst people, but over the last year I have begun to realise that my social skills are not particularly good, and it only seems to be deteriorating further as time goes on. I have always been a very quiet person (I remember when I was younger I was scared to even answer the phone, and still rarely do with my mobile and as a result always have it on silent; at first because I don’t like it going off when I’m around other people in case it distracts or offends them or causes them to pay me more attention). But recently I have become more and more aware of the fact. When I’m presented with a social opening, I often tend to stumble so painfully over my words and end up saying something that makes me seem really slow, boring or just downright stupid, and that worries me, because whenever I think of that I can imagine it’s only ever going to make it worse. I love the close circle of friends I’m in, I love them to death, but oftentimes I feel I am the most average and unexciting of us all, and sometimes that causes me to think if they may believe that as well. I am much more comfortable with one-on-one conversations, I always have been, but even then there are some people I’m sometimes unable to spark up an exciting conversation with, such as my sisters. I hold back from saying things, things that I know deep down inside probably aren’t going to do any harm and will only contribute to the conversation, but my brain keeps telling me to say absolutely nothing just so I can get out of the conversation quicker.

    I am socially inept, now at least, and I hate it, and I’m not entirely sure how I can get out of it.

    Does anyone else here have these experiences? And if so, are there ways you attempt to overcome them?

    Thank you for your time and sorry again for the ramble.
    Ben

    #40098
    Matt
    Participant

    Ben,

    I refuse your apology for rambling! Perhaps you had a lot to say, and had you said any less it wouldn’t have been what you needed to get out. 🙂 Social awkwardness is pretty common, which is why public speaking is the number one fear… ahead of death! A couple things came to heart as I read you words.

    I used to be afraid of speaking to others. Even while waiting at the checkout, my mind would bounce through a bazillion different things to say, but I could barely peep a squeak. And, after I did speak, I would cycle what I said through my head over and over.

    The solution that worked for me was twofold. The first was starting a metta practice, which resolves self-loathing and self-judgment. Ajahn Jayasaro has a great video on YouTube called “metta” which gives simple instructions. I highly recommend it!

    The second was accepting that communication is inherently awkward. We perceive in non conceptual images, and try to distill them into words. Said differently, when we see a tree, for example, we know to call it a tree. However, as someone with a high level of empathy (have you noticed that yet?) a lot of the information and perceptions you experience are not easily put into concepts. It is not that you are “boring” but rather what you see is perhaps different than what people around you talk about.

    What I’ve found is that the best solution is to let go of the mind and jump from the spontaneous creativity flowing from your heart. Its what is here in these words to you, and as I write them out they leave almost no footprint in the mind. Just breathe it in, breathe it out. Over and over and over. If something comes up that the other person responds to, breathe that in next and breathe out love. Your heart is incredibly strong, and its just fear clamping down on your generous nature that causes the mind to burst with cycles. Like on old cartoons where Bugs Bunny would stick his finger in the end of Elmer Fudd’s rifle and cause an explosion in Fudd’s face. Your heart wants to be generous and give its song to others, and your throat does a veto, and all that energy has to go somewhere!

    Give it a shot, jump in. Even if you say something dumb or the people respond oddly, that just becomes the next in breath, the next fuel for your precious gift of heart.

    With warmth,
    Matt

    #40132
    Ben
    Participant

    Matt, thank you so very much for your kind and encouraging words. I cannot thank you enough for that. I have since had a look at a video on metta meditation, which I believe is by Jayasaro, and already that was very helpful and extended light onto what you have opened for me. I truly appreciate your contribution. Thank you very much. I will work as best I can toward this, and there is a twinkle of faith in my heart now.

    Ben

    #42567
    Brianna
    Participant

    Ben,

    Thank you so much for writing this…I have had a hard time expressing how I feel and I couldn’t put into words how hard it is for me to speak to people other than my mind just goes blank. People really couldn’t understand that and so when I read what you wrote I said finally, a way to explain that I’m not just shy or that I don’t want to talk to people. How you said you stumble over words then you think you sounded stupid and you don’t want to mess up what your saying to someone sounds like what happens to me in a situation where I have to speak to someone and how I react. I just wanted to say thank you for writing this, now I know what to say instead my mind just blanks.

    Thank You,
    Brianna

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