• GarboDog@lemmy.world
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    4 minutes ago

    is making animal noises at each-other a sufficient way of small talk? asking for ourselves.

  • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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    11 minutes ago

    I think that small talk is an ever constant reminder of the pervasive nature that is ‘wanting to be happy’.

    Don’t get me wrong, there isn’t necessarily anything wrong with wanting to be happy. There is something wrong about being willing to sacrifice anything for what you perceive is the thing (or person, or hobby, or whatever) that will bring you happiness.

    I think that the reason small talk is so fucking meaningless is because we all are just seeking some measure of peace and happiness in our lives. We simply can’t tell everyone who asks that our day is going terribly, for one thing it will make us feel worse — for another it will also make everyone that has to tolerate us feel worse. So we say “Fine” or “Good” or “Tired” or “The weather has me down” or whatever other instantly acceptable and obvious answer is easiest and ends the interaction quickly.

    I think if we allowed people to be more honest with themselves that things like small talk wouldn’t really exist beyond trying to fill a silent void. But sure, friendly human noises go brrr.

  • Log in | Sign up@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Seems a great many of you need this.

    [Content not viewable in your region]

    Nope. Don’t need that.

    Did you know that the reason imgur blocks the UK is that it is trying to evade a fine for selling children’s personal data?

    They are a shit corporation and they already deleted old data for posters that didn’t have a paid subscription with them.

    There are other image hosts.

    Lemmy lets you upped directly to your instance and if gets federated.

    Don’t use imgur.

    • lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com
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      37 minutes ago

      Another great argument for text alternatives such as link to text-based (archived) sources: graceful failover & accessibility.

  • mavu@discuss.tchncs.de
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    5 hours ago

    “Hi, I’m very friendly, you don’t have to be afraid of me, i don’t want to harm you, we are identical!”

  • SmokeyDope@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Honestly, my favorite people are the ones who love to talk and are horribly desperate to babble to potential listeners. I’m not much of a talker but I absolutely dont mind looking you in the eyes and nodding my head as you talk about your hobby or current going ons.

    In bigger social groups I noticed this weird thing fellow humans tend to do where they all want a slice of being the talker/ center of attention and constantly cut off eachother or tune out current speaker waiting for them to shut up so they can start their monkey babble turn.

    This behavior absolutely infuriates me and I refuse to take part in it. I would rather just be silent and let you say your piece than interrupt the flow.

    As a knock on effect people subconsciously notice I’m not competing with them for talk time and am sending them constant listening signals like looking in the eye nodding head “mhm got you” stuff. This seems to really go a long way with making friendly with talkative types with minimal effort.

    • Devjavu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      Hobbys or current going ons is nice, but that’s not small talk. That’s just talk. Not big talk nor small talk, more like medium talk. It’s where they tell you stuff about themselves that actually matter, but not in a revolutionary way.

      Small talk is chatting about the weather or talking about that person at work.

  • Bamboodpanda@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    “Small talk” is actually one of the most powerful tools for connection we have. It’s not meaningless chatter; it’s the doorway into deeper understanding.

    The trick isn’t to say the most interesting thing in the room or ask interesting questions, it’s to be interested.

    When you ask someone, “How’s your day going?” or “What’s been keeping you busy lately?” and actually listen to their answer, you’re signaling that you care about their world. That’s the quiet magic of small talk: it turns strangers into people, and people into friends.

    Start simple. Ask open questions that invite reflection instead of yes or no answers. Things like:

    “How’s work treating you this week?”

    “What’s something you’ve been enjoying lately?”

    “Do you like slow days or do they make you restless?”

    Then, build on what they share. Match their tone. Add your own small experiences (“I know what you mean, I kind of love quiet days too”). These little back-and-forth moments help conversations feel easy and balanced.

    The value of small talk isn’t in the words themselves, it’s in the attention you give others. Over time, these small exchanges build trust, warmth, and familiarity. They’re how relationships begin, how empathy grows, and how we remind each other that we’re seen.

    So don’t underestimate small talk. Practice curiosity. Ask, listen, share. Every person you meet carries a piece of the story you haven’t heard yet, and small talk is how you start uncovering it.

    • Ryanmiller70@lemmy.zip
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      15 minutes ago

      “How’s work treating you?”

      It’s work.

      “What have you been enjoying lately?”

      Sleeping when I get home from work.

      “Do you like slow days?”

      No cause it means I have to work longer.

    • MajorasTerribleFate@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      The trick isn’t to say the most interesting thing in the room or ask interesting questions, it’s to be interested.

      OK, but, like… I’m not interested. I have a strong interest in others viewing me nonthreateningly, because I have no interest in causing harm or taking advantage of others and would rather not be viewed suspiciously. But the actual mechanics of small talk are dull and uninteresting to me. I could walk through the motions, and generally do when I have to, but the kind of energy and attention it takes for me to do that while also being aware of anything else is exhausting. I’m perfectly happy being on the sidelines or simply not in attendance at all. I just want to be able to carry some sort of authentication or certificate that indicates “Normal People including Jeff T., Paul R., Caitlin P., Rilee L., and Jaime A. all vouch for me being safe and trustworthy. If you don’t know any of them, I can provide further references.”

    • frunch@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      As someone who can have difficulty socializing (unless it’s something I’m passionate or knowledgeable about, but then i risk oversharing), i decided to try reading a book i ran into called Supercommunicators. It actually touches on a number of things you mentioned here, just curious if you happen to have read it yourself… It’s been pretty enlightening for me, and i find the things I’ve picked up from it can easily be applied to daily life. Some good food for thought, at very least!

      • shalafi@lemmy.worldOP
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        18 minutes ago

        Keep it simple! Andrew Carnegie wrote the only book you need, How to Win Friends and Influence People. Terrible title in today’s context, that’s not really what it’s about.

        Carnegie set out to find a solid book on human communication. Traveled all over the US, meeting and writing university professors, was astonished that such a thing didn’t exist, so he wrote it.

        Interestingly, you can pick it up and read any chapter. Nothing need be in order, it’s not a study course, very easy to digest. Most of it is simply Carnegie telling stories.

        There was one that’s always stuck with me: He goes to dinner at a man’s house and the guy won’t shut the fuck up, talks on and on and on. Carnegie shut up, listened, made it clear he was listening, hardly spoke a word. On the way out the man was congratulating Carnegie on what a fine conversationalist he is!

        Public domain, totally free, give it a spin. I need to brush up on it myself.

    • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      7 hours ago

      Literally all I could say to any of this would be downer shit. That’s why I hate small talk. It’s just depressing and I feel like it makes me look bad.

      • angrystego@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        People actually LOVE to complain to each other. Perhaps if you shared your downer shit, you could find lots of connection. Just be sure to dose the information in small bits, so that the other person has enough space to react and share their own depressiive stories.

        • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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          49 minutes ago

          Why would I want to just add more shit to what someone else is dealing with and then have theirs added to me? That would just leave us both more stressed out than ever.

  • Katana314@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    I actually feel like Arc Raiders has helped with this a bit.

    I’m very distrustful of anyone who signals peaceful intent with nothing but an emote line. If people use voice comms, it shows a modicum of social openness, and helps humanize them. More often than not, people end up chatting about threats they’ve seen or where there’s useful loot.

    There’s even a famous clip of a guy breaking open a bot who gets shot at, and he defuses the situation by yelling at the shooter that he expects better of him, and that they’re all just trying to get by.

    • RedFrank24@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Technically that’s down to Imgur. Basically the UK government told Imgur to stop selling children’s data to advertisers and Imgur was like “No, we’re going to keep doing that and you’re blocked”.

      But, OFCOM basically said “Okay sure you can block the UK and that will stop you selling any children’s data going forward, but you still sold children’s data in the past, so the fine still stands” and now it’s kinda in limbo because Imgur doesn’t have a UK office so there’s nowhere to extract the money from. However, even if Imgur did introduce age assurance (which is increasingly likely given that Imgur is based in California and California is flirting with age assurance requirements too) and therefore would be in compliance with the Online Safety Act, they would still be fined because they failed to protect children’s data in the past.