

Moderator: Fist and Faith
There are good loners and bad loners.onewyteduck wrote:Wow! This is almost like looking in a mirror. I don't have horses and haven't really spent much time around them but other than that......Alynna Lis Eachann wrote:I admit that I long for companionship every once in a while, but generally I'm a loner and a social slob to boot - I tend to offend people without realizing I've done it until much later. On the whole, I'm far more adept at reading and getting along with horses and dogs than with people. When I go to parties I usually end up hiding in a corner or clearing out rather quickly. The less people, the better off I am.
I don't see anything wrong with being a loner. We can't all be socialites, and I don't think we should be. The world needs solitary thinkers and actors. I tend to think that we loners are often survivors, too, in one way or another, and that's something to be proud of.
Parties......my son's wedding was absolute torture for me but I did manage to behave and be the proper Mother of the Groom. (Except when finally, the heals HAD to go!)
In general, I'm happiest when alone and have never seen a problem with it. My husband travels on business frequently and it's bliss when he's gone. Of course, it's fun when he comes back, too!
Yeah? Well anytime you want to try it out more frequently, we're listening.Matrixman wrote:Actually, I can say the same for the Watch--in terms of my not having had any real, consistently meaningful exchange with anyone, except maybe once in a long while.
I also use eye contact differently. If I am with someone who feels comfortable with eye contact, then I make similar contact. With those that are not confortable with a whole lot of eye contact, I adjust for this by looking elsewhere periodically so eye contact is in short spurts. Sometimes I maintain constant eye contact (like with kids) just to make them squirm a little. Children actually seem to respond very well to eye contact... kinda like training our puppy.Nathan wrote:Eye contact... I always keep eye contact with someone while they talk. Sometimes because I feel it makes them more comfortable, sometimes because I feel it makes them uncomfortable.
But when I'm talking I find it very difficult to maintain eye contact, it's just an automatic reation that when I'm thinking of an answer/comment I'll look away from the person I'm talking to. I suppose it's better than just doing it while I'm lying, that way people have nothing to compare it against...
Geez, man, you make it sound like I'm the coming of the Buddha or something. Improve you? They've got pills for that. There's more than enough talk to go around in the Close and the Think Tank with the regular gang of Not-Ready-For-SRD-Dissection Players (heh). My attitude about forum participation is this:Avatar wrote: Actually, I derive considerable pleasure from trying to tease you into dancing across these minefields with us more often. It doesn't have much effect, but I'm gonna keep trying. I firmly believe that your increased participation will improve us. And we could all do with some improving.![]()
Yeah, I'm aware of Social Anxiety Disorder. Sorry to hear that you have to deal with it... wanting to be with people and not being able to is painful - when I was a kid, first arrived here, I was complete or near-complete outcast for a long time, and it hurt like hell. Now I find I've simply grown up to, in a general sense, dislike people. One of the things that puts me off crowds, especially, is the herd mentality. Never let anyone tell you that people aren't animals.Khaliban wrote:There are good loners and bad loners.
I suffer from a condition called Social Anxiety Disorder, and intense, phobic level fear of social interaction. It is the third most common mental illness in the US after depression and alcoholism, and it hurts like hell. One in eight people suffers from it. You might want to look into it.
Of course, I'm also stubborn and independant, so I'm both kinds of loners.