Because I honestly can’t. I can barely talk with the very few people I know. Is just so out of my range. That’s why I don’t have friends or a partner and I don’t see that changing.

EDIT: no, responding comments here or asking this question ISN’T having a conversation for me. So I don’t feel this as “progress”.

  • Vanth@reddthat.com
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    4 days ago

    Yeah. I haven’t always been very comfortable with it, I made active effort to learn ways to make it easier.

    I also lived in the Midwest for a while where asking someone “How are you doing” is an actual invitation to conversation and not just a response of “fine”. I learned some people are very open to chitchat with strangers, some people aren’t, and it gets pretty easy with practice to tell which is which noting body language and those first few words they respond to you with.

    Also, you’re doing it now, OP. Way to go. Forum conversations like this totally count. Maybe next level up for you is some IM chatting with someone from a hobby group you’re interested in.

    • 1984@lemmy.today
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      3 days ago

      He is not doing it now though. Chatting online has nothing to do with real life talking to another person.

    • Platypus@lemmings.worldOP
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      4 days ago

      It totally doesn’t count dude. Especially since this isn’t my first language, or second, I have no use for English outside Google and pointless social media light usage.

  • Very well. The other night was at a fall festival and they had some carnys pushing carts filled with toys and balloons, you know, plastic swords, plastic guns, snaps, stink bombs, and blow up guitars, etc., and they all had a bunch of flags for sale, including, at the very top, a bunch of made in China trump shit.

    I saw one carney, who was black, and he did not have trump shit. So when it was time to let the kiddo pick a toy or something, I said he could buy from that carney. And I struck up a convo by offering that it was his lack of Trump shit that got him this sale; an important thing, I think, to tell retailers of this sort. We dapped it up for a second and he was looked at me like, “come the fuck on, obviously there’s no trump shit on my cart.” He said one of the other Carneys told him how much more money he could make, and how he asked the other guy back, “man, are you fucking stupid?” Nice guy.

  • Cruxifux@feddit.nl
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    3 days ago

    I have conversations with strangers all the time. I believe everyone is capable of this through the power of alcohol.

  • Tarquinn2049@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I noticed early in my 20’s that my social anxiety had gotten to a point where I couldn’t casually chat with random people. So I made an effort to do it anyway even though the results wouldn’t be favourable for a while. It took a few years before I noticed it didn’t take much of a push any more to start. I’m 40 now and while I still don’t enjoy talking to strangers, especially when just making meaningless small talk, I at least don’t have a wall of pre-dread anymore to climb in the case that I do need/want to talk to a stranger. Like if they dropped something, or if I want a product in a store that is not currently stocked on the shelf.

  • catharso@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 days ago

    yeah, no problem.

    i’m a social butterfly when i’m drunk and somehow managed to transfer this skill into my sober life over the years.

    i’m even pretty good at phonecalls now. those terrified me my whole life. now i often prefer them over emails/texting.

  • OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    I could have a conversation with a stranger, but I would prefer not to. I don’t find silence uncomfortable and I’m perfectly happy to wait quietly.

    I don’t like it when people try to chat when I’m having my hair cut, or waiting for something. Small talk is a drag and I really don’t care about any of it.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Sure! I mean, we’re doing it right now, right? ;)

    Or do you mean exclusively in person?

    I’ll be honest with you, I don’t get out much (health issues) but when I do, I don’t LIKE talking to people, but I do, because it takes so little effort to make someone feel better about their day.

    It also helps that pretty much everyone here has a tattoo and that’s a good icebreaker.

    “Wow, nice ink! How long have you had it?”

    • Platypus@lemmings.worldOP
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      3 days ago

      Exclusively in person. For me online chat has very little value and the lack of a face gives you a protection you can’t have out there.

      • 1984@lemmy.today
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        3 days ago

        100%. Chatting online has nothing to do with talking to people in real life. It’s completely different. I have no idea who you are on the other side of this, and I don’t even want to know. That’s the major difference, this is just wasting time together, not building relationships.

      • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        And yet here you are, soliciting this thing that is “pointless” (c.f. above) and of “little value”. Odd.

  • BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Every single day. I am someone who people just really open up to. I don’t know what it is but I have the craziest conversations.

  • johannesvanderwhales@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Yes, lots. And not because I’m an extrovert. It’s a very commonly used life skill and I wouldn’t, for example, be able to do my job without it.

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    No. Between being really poor about remembering names and whether I’ve met someone before, and always being suspicious about their motives for approaching me, it never goes well.

    This past summer I travelled down south and it was a strange experience - people were friendly and wanted to chat, and even be helpful, and not once was there an obvious scam. I’m too old to be discovering something like this but I’ve always been with family or friends or something, or visiting tourist spots, but this time I was wandering in “normal” places. After a week, I was finally open to small talk without suspicion, but what an experience!

    • MutilationWave@lemmy.world
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      I live right below the dividing line between north and south. People here are definitely southern in attitude and habit. All the bullshit small talk drove me crazy as a kid. As an adult I tolerate it but I still don’t care for it.

      On the other hand for my work I travel extensively. I love working in the north because nobody bothers me or asks what I’m doing. This can be a serious problem in the south because if I don’t indulge people they may decide I’m rude and then complain about me.

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    you can, it just takes practice.

    talking to people reminds me how similar everybody is and how connected we all are, regardless of what I read on the internet.

    traveling, even to a different town, will make it much more likely you’ll talk to strangers

    international travelers are far more gracious and interested in people as a group than any other group I know.

    people anywhere, though, seem to enjoy hearing an idle idea or personal observation. a lot of people are lonely or so set in their routine that anything new is exciting, so I’ll try and say something just to let them know that somebody else has noticed they exist.

    I love giving small compliments about hair or clothes, because people are invariably shocked to receive them.

  • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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    I think that’s something you can learn. It definitely takes some training. But speaking from own experience, I think I started out as an introvert and in my very fist job I had to talk to lots of random strangers each day. And I adjusted. Nowadays I can start conversations easily, do smalltalk… I mean I’m probably still the same person and sometimes I like to talk and sometimes I don’t like to open up at all. But I know what to say, how to keep a conversation going or end it if I like and it doesn’t take that much effort. And I think that makes me a bit more at ease. Knowing I have that skill available. But it certainly took me some time and effort to get there.

    And I’m still not particularly good at mimicking an extroverted person. But I don’t care that much anymore. If I make mistakes, or I struggle with some conversational partner, that’s just what it is. It makes me uncomfortable. But at some point I’m going to have other problems to deal with and I’m going to forget about it.

  • 3ntranced@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I’m always sitting primed and ready for some random chit chat but I’m too shy to initiate. If you ever see a mid 20s male sitting alone, he more than likely would be more than happy to talk to you or anyone for that matter.

    We don’t get alot of attention when not seeked out :/

  • Nicht BurningTurtle@feddit.org
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    3 days ago

    I do now, tho I prefer to read in silence. What helped me, was to remind myself, that in the grand scheme of things this conversation and any opinion this stranger will have of me is irrelevant.