zephryi
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- Apr 4, 2009
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Ah, have you ever done that with your name? Horrible!
Not visually, but audibly? More often than I'd care to admit.

Ah, have you ever done that with your name? Horrible!
lucazin,
sei. falo um pouco. mas tenho verganho do meo portugês... estudei-lo dois anos, é tudo...
gosto muito dos portugeses. estou em França, sou americana. Os franceses sao frios, arrogantes, etc. gosto de Lisboa, Sintra, é simpàtica.
( desculpe ... o meo nivel da lingua nao é bom )
bemvindo...
(ok, i really suck at portuguese)
I do that quite a lot, and it pretty much socially cripples me. Every time I think of having a conversation, I paralyse myself before I even say a word by thinking of everything I could say and everything that could be talked about-- I have no idea of how to initiate small talk with someone. I have a hang-up that everything I say has to be either stunningly witty or dazzlingly profound. Generally, I say nothing. FAIL.
I completely understand. Trying to be profound and/or witty all the time is so exhausting!
I used to have this very much as well, now I try to plan my conversations in advanced even though I know that it won't happen like I think.
I will think about what I will say over and over again in my head and when I talk to that person I never bring it up but usally I forget about what I was thinking about saying to them.
I, too, do this all of the time. And then sometimes I think I said something in such a stupid way that I'll try to explain, (much) later. It goes something like this:
Me: "You know that conversation we had X weeks/months/years ago?"
Other person is quiet.
Me: "Well, what I really meant was this... (insert what I should have said here)"
Other person: "I don't remember that / What are you talking about?"
I, too, do this all of the time. And then sometimes I think I said something in such a stupid way that I'll try to explain, (much) later. It goes something like this:
Me: "You know that conversation we had X weeks/months/years ago?"
Other person is quiet.
Me: "Well, what I really meant was this... (insert what I should have said here)"
Other person: "I don't remember that / What are you talking about?"
Ermine said:I hate it when that happens! While INTPs tend to have socializer's remorse, many socialites have socializers amnesia. Sad.
I strongly tend to do this but I have to force myself not to. I can have a nasty stutter and thinking too much about what I'm going to say exacerbates it. The upshot is that it forces me to at least seem a bit less painfully introverted than I actually am.I used to have this very much as well, now I try to plan my conversations in advanced even though I know that it won't happen like I think.
I will think about what I will say over and over again in my head and when I talk to that person I never bring it up but usally I forget about what I was thinking about saying to them.
I used to have this very much as well, now I try to plan my conversations in advanced even though I know that it won't happen like I think.
I will think about what I will say over and over again in my head and when I talk to that person I never bring it up but usally I forget about what I was thinking about saying to them.
When I'm playing a game I will often replay a part until I can perfect it (without loss of resources). Over and over again until it's well enough. It's very revealing when brought up here. Why can't we just play the game, forget about the score, and who cares if we run out of bullets/lives? Other people are playing for fun without such fear of dying or needing to be a perfectionist.-That I could do it so much better if I could just reload a saved game and try it again.
I've always had socialization "remorse" like this. I come up with things off the top of my head in conversation, then I'll go back and rethink them over and over to see whether I could've/should've expressed myself differently, whether the other person understood what I was trying to get across, what sparked the reaction of the other person if there was one, what the other person really thought, etc. so on and so forth, my thought process goes on awhile. Sometimes I end up at the point where I'm sorry I had the conversation in the first place.
I often get surges of emotions after what I judged to be either a very poor or very good encounter. I am not systematised enough to know what specific things I did during the conversation.
Why regret having the conversation? Unless it caused events to occur which irreversibly damaged something... I find if anything is regrettable, it's having a missed opportunity or incomplete endeavor, not a swing-and-miss that enhances your practice anyway
Many of us figured out a long time ago we might as well just accept that we are misunderstood most of the time and understood in here to the point where we have no secrets. And then we just get on with it, eager to see what's going to happen next.
I tend to say things sometimes without thinking them through: Ne gets some 'brilliant' idea, E blurts it out. Ti later analyzes and then I get this remorseful feeling that you speak of.
I'll be talking to a friend describing something, and I'll come up with metaphors and try to relate what I'm saying to something else to get the point across, then the next day I'll think about what I said and realize I didn't describe it quite right and get the urge to tell her that I "lied" and this is how it really is.
And the spelling/definition thing? Same. Does anyone else ever manage to stare at a word while trying to decide whether it's spelled right or not to the point where it looks like gibberish and end up having to look it up anyways?
Os franceses sao frios, arrogantes, etc.
...But I began to chance my head since I've came to Portugal.
Je aller trois fois à France, un fois je aller à plus villes comme Bruxellas, Tours, Nimês, dois fois étions au le Nueve Année à Paris, ce été três belle. Malheureusement (?) je n'aller pas au États-Unis, mais moi beau-père était dans New York par dois heures, il ammé.
Merci
(French...)
I had a lucky conversation with a friend on Friday, though, that my Ti, if it were to evaluate it deeply, would call moronic. (It was about going to my year's Graduation party and what colleges we were going to next year, and she also dragged me into some conversation about hairstyles.) Normally I would think I'd been an idiot, but it was surprisingly easy to let my Ne take control of the conversation at the time, then to simply let it go afterwards. It was fun, too: I need to learn the hang of that.
And the spelling/definition thing? Same. Does anyone else ever manage to stare at a word while trying to decide whether it's spelled right or not to the point where it looks like gibberish and end up having to look it up anyways?
Yeah Op, I have this to some degree. Most noticeably I experience it with tumblr blogs I post. I will write a post on thoughts I've had and then at some point after words I feel filled with doubt over the accuracy of my own words. They never seem to fully represent my thoughts and appear over-simplified. This creates the image that I am naive, and this image makes me wish I could delete it, and often I do end up deleting posts. I attribute this to the incompleteness of all my thoughts. My thoughts are transient and are part of a process of cultivating ideas and expanding them through more learning, so no thought that I communicate ever seems to perfectly represent me or my relationship to the thoughts.