Or do you try to be poetic and convoluted?
or neither/other?
I can get impatient in conversation, so I think I for the most part try to make myself clear.
Man grows used to everything, the scoundrel!
-Raskolnikov
Yeah the more the person is a stranger the more I’ll slip into being as non-threatening, friendly and understandable as possible. In professional settings that probably means changing my accent to be more neutral and slowing down my speech so everything sounds more deliberate. In social settings I imitate the cadence and pitch of a valley girl since I guess I’ve made a link with that and being approachable. It’s weird because I’m British and often find myself slipping into a slight American accent.
like slight in the way that Americans never notice but British people do and comment on it
"I take back like half of the exclamation points.....they make me look....eager to please. Which I AM....but I don't want anyone to KNOW that"
- Carrie Fisher
I try extremely hard to communicate as simply as possible (I still suck at it), probably to the point I've gone too far to the other side, especially verbally.
My natural stream of writing and speaking tends towards the technical way of saying things and trying to get across shades of meaning, which doesn't really work for people who don't already think the same way I do.
at work I advise the general public on some complicated stuff so often i cant simplify what I’m saying because it’s loaded with technical terms. and I always make a point of stopping every so often and say something like, “wow so that’s an overwhelming amount of information!” “Did that make sense to you? because it was confusing even for me!” “I think we’ve earned a cup of tea after that” With the aim of trying to make them feel better and account for the fact that they probably didn’t find me that understandable
"I take back like half of the exclamation points.....they make me look....eager to please. Which I AM....but I don't want anyone to KNOW that"
- Carrie Fisher
I don't give a damn.
Peeps take whatever they want from which is said. What they take can be based outside of the actual message, like prejudices or whether they like the person talking or not. I've seen people arguing because they used different words to say the same thing, i.e. "forgiving" vs "letting go" as to say moving on with your life and putting down boundaries. Lasted what, two hours? Then they finaly realized they meant the same thing and it fizzled out awkwardly. Funny moments.
I've seen the opposite too, people getting along over a same word they mean differently. Shitstorm oncoming.
I can both be painfuly direct or maddeningly vague and all in between, depending on idk, zodiac signs and the phase of the moon maybe?
I have a bad habit of defaulting to a longer word over a short one when I'm looking for a synonym. It started because I noticed when reading, it's harder to read a long spaghetti-string of one-syllable words, than an equivalent string of longer ones: larger words have more "mass," forcing readers to slow down as they metabolize the sentence, so they don't miss anything. It's not embellishment, it is not deliberate for me, it's an instinct.
I'd rather be terse if I could. It's much harder.
both. The point is that I'm never casual in my words, not whether it makes sense or not.
But in general, I dumb the ideas in my head very much to the lowest possible denominator, so I don't wear my voice out.
with people I dont know well I try to make myself as clear as possible so they dont get the wrong idea of me, but people close to me already know my deal so its harder for them to misinterpret
I try to be as simple, clear and blunt as possible when I'm trying to impart information to others. To make sure they understand. It annoys me when others use needlessly compicated language to seem erudite but fail to make themselves understood and I avoid this as much as possible myself.
but I like how Nietzsche writes.. so.. meh.
Last edited by SGF; 07-17-2020 at 09:35 PM.
I try hard to make sure I’m understood correctly (if there is such a thing) but I’m also trying to understand myself
Sometimes it seems being poetic is an easier and more effective way to help others try to understand
As simple and understandable as possible.
I try to be understandable and communicate clearly. I never feel like I'm good enough at it. My focus is I like to be able to explain things clearly. However there is just so much more to communication. For instance, I'm bad at delegating things to others and I believe the best way is to simply give an order (it's what I prefer--I don't like hinting or calling something a request when it's actually a requirement or starting with "could you do..." when it's kind of a requirement), but that's not what I do. I hate imposing power on others so much. I hate telling people what to do. I hate hierarchies and command structures. So when I delegate it may be unclear because I'm a chickenshit. I disagree with the system, with the entire way it's all organized. I feel guilty about being any part of it and then my communication becomes very weak. My interpersonal communication outside of people close to me is bad too. I don't feel like I can interact normally with others.
Oh, to find you in dreams - mixing prior, analog, and never-beens... facts slip and turn and change with little lucidity. except the strong, permeating reality of emotion.
Depends on if I feel like, we both earned it via a connection. I won't go out of my way to make myself understandable to just anybody though because that feels... futile to me.
As an IEI I am sort of 'poetic' naturally as well even when I'm washing the dishes or cutting the grass. I don't have to try be that way it's just so organic. I am not even really being particularly fluffy or wordy either, it just comes across like that. I do it so organically without trying.
I really strive to make difficult ideas simple and understandable. But the things I talk about tend to be more technical, and I don't like to sacrifice generality/correctness, so it's always a struggle. I'm generally overly terse actually, so I try to offset this by giving examples and things.
Other people often accuse me of oversimplifying so it's safe to say that I'm not on the arcane/convoluted end of the spectrum. My philosophy is the quote by David Hilbert: "A mathematical theory is not to be considered complete until you have made it so clear that you can explain it to the first man whom you meet on the street."