Yesterday I was at a restaurant with my friends. This Asian guy came in and sat near us. I noticed him speaking Korean on the phone. I consume a lot of Korean content, so this got me really excited. On a whim, I decided to go up to him and chat. I introduced myself, and he invited me to sit with him if I wanted to, even though he was a bit awkward, lol. He ordered some stuff for me. I found out he’s here in Switzerland for work, and we had a good talk. I ended up hanging out with him around the city. We exchanged contact info and are seeing each other again today after he gets off work. It was my first time doing something like this, and I honestly didn’t know meeting people could be so spontaneous and organic.
I’m guessing you’re young? This is exactly how people have met new people for literally millennia. It’s only the decade or so that it became problematic. I’m glad you were able to figure it out and take the leap. May you find many new rewarding relationships, short and long term. So long as you respect anyone saying no to your overture, you’ll probably find many people are happy to have someone else take the first step.
That was considered normal behavior for most of human history.
This is what they stole from us.
imho people gave it away.
I struggle to strike up a conversation with people I already know
I just talk to myself these days
Yes. And I hate that it’s so hard to do now. My generation will always have a phone and earbuds in, and then complain that it’s hard to meet people.
I’ve gotten in an elevator with people my age and received awkward looks and silence when I make even a small comment.
Totally agree, but don’t let that stop you, keep at it! Maybe those just weren’t your people.
If I’m on an elevator thats moving more than 2+ floors usually thats enough time for the weather conversation or quick small talk.
Yes, this is how life was before internet. We made friends and talked to people who didn’t look up at you bug eyed from 24/7 tik Tok content if you talked to them.
Young folks are really going to have a tough go of human social interaction. No wonder depression is at an all time high.
Before the Internet people used newspapers and books to avoid interacting with strangers.
It was nowhere near as bad as it is now.
And, at least that could invite conversation about the news or book. You’ve never seen the book someone’s reading and been excited because you like it too?
Now you have no clue if bobby is watching oann news on his phone (he probably is) or a brianrot tiktok
Yeah, phones are far too expensive to swat people away with. Plus, a rolled up newspaper or a book has much more heft.
You knew not to mess with the person reading Atlas Shrugged, that sucker hurt.
Skill issue, just gotta get a bigger phone. One of those rugged bomb proof ones.
Need to bring back Nokia brick phones for hitting motherfuckers with.
I live in a rural area and I regularly talk to people on my walk. For me they are strangers but apparently I talk to a lot the them regularly. I don’t remember faces/names easily so often they address me like a friend and I am clueless.
Last summer I told someone I wanted to talk to them ‘face-to-face’ and he asked me if that was an app :(
Shocking what can happen when humanity put down the phone and meet people in real life. Wish this normal behavior will be more commonplace like it used to be.
I’ve been a hangout at the coffee shop/bar and casually meet people person for over 20yrs. In the last six months the amount of conversations I’ve had with strangers has shot up exponentially. For the first time in many years it’s reminded me of what the social scene was like when I was in my teens and early 20s at the turn of the century. And it’s not just people my age returning to it, it’s a lot of the 21-25 crowd. I’ve been invited to play darts, join a pool or foosball game, or play some Buck Hunter with a stranger more times this year than I probably was in the past five. It’s nice, a chill night out meeting new people even if it’s a temporary “let’s converse for a bit”.
Happy to hear! :-)
No, never. I’m too introverted for that.
LPT.
Old people love to chat. Ask them anything. “Is there a good bakery around here?”
It’s like any other exercise, the more you do, the more you’ll be able to do tomorrow.
When I used to travel a lot more for work I’d strike up conversations with people at the bar, usually went well. Especially older folk are more than willing to share their stories.
Congrats. Modern society has neutered us to the point where doing something this natural feels exceptionally daring. Of course, there’s also those of us who are introverted, for whom walking up to a stranger is a genuine challenge.
How did it feel ? how freeing ?
Think about this. When they made the movie ‘The Net’ in 1995, they showed how oddball Sandra Bullock was by having her order food with her computer.
In that far off past, even if you were introverted, you couldn’t function without doing almost all your transactions live and face-to-face.
I wasn’t of food-ordering age in 95, I’ll have to watch that one. Can’t get enough of Sandra Bullock
I’m a dude though, the circumstances aren’t the same, lol.
But I have, actually, many times. Especially in uni and highschool, I’d be the one to approach the quiet kid cause I just wasn’t comfortable with them feeling excluded. I made a really good friend in uni that way, a quiet, very clever and responsible ginger dude (in a country of brown people, he was basically a mythological being, lol) I ended up spending many of my afternoons with, just yapping and toking our late teens away. 🙏
My brother was always super shy, so I grew up around it, and know how to a handle it. I’ve always recognized the shy person, and made sure to speak with them, ask their opinion, etc. They have plenty to say, it just makes them uncomfortable, so they generally appreciate it when someone else makes the approach, and doesn’t make any issue out of their shyness.
This gave me an idea, I wonder if the username BrokeBackGinger is taken 🤔
Sometimes. I dont push for it, but am always open to conversations that arise organically
Most normal experience of life before 2005-2010ish.
The real old school version would have you both become pen pals and mail each other letters a few times a year for decades until one is you died or moves.
I’ve always worked in retail and sales, and have even owned retail shops, so I long ago got comfortable with chatting with strangers.
I once went to a big dinner party with a couple of friends, where none of us knew anyone else at the party.
We sat together, but I barely said a word to my friends. I spent most of my time speaking with people I didn’t already know. As we were walking home, one of my friends asked “How do you do that? Just talk to people like that?”
I hadn’t really thought of it before, but all I do is Be Honest. If I know about a subject, I will say it, and even debate it if I have to. But more importantly, if I DON’T know about a subject, I don’t pretend to know stuff, and try to fake it. That only makes you look like a doofus. There is no shame in admitting you don’t know much about something, but you are curious, and then ask questions, and then follow up questions, so they see that you are really trying to understand, and you are counting on them to teach you. People really appreciate that attitude, especially when it’s genuine.
Even more importantly, I try to avoid subjects I already know about, and can expound upon at length, and try to learn about something new. Someone has an interesting job that I’ve never experienced? Let’s learn about that.
It’s especially effective if I’ve done both - asked questions about things I don’t know about, while also speaking definitively about things I do know about. Then people realize that you are smart, but also a genuinely curious person, who isn’t just trying to look important by being a phony.
Don’t be like my dummy uncle, who always has to prove to everybody that he knows more about their job than they do, no matter how educated and experienced they are, and always invents some story where he saved the day, or told off someone in authority. {sigh}
Yeah exactly! Everything you said. It’s definitely curiosity that’s key. Just being curious about the people around you. Every single person you pass will see the world through a different window, than you ever can, and the only way to see through their window is to ask them, their view is formed by how they, specifically grew up, and the places they’ve seen, and knowledge they’ve absorbed.
Personally, I pretend I don’t know as much about something, because other people’s interpretation can give you a better perspective on something, you already know. Probably pretend is too strong a word, I more ask questions from their perspective before saying my perspective. Because if you just make bold statements, people are mostly too polite to correct you. And I find, sometimes people help me add to my knowledge, or help me see I’ve picked something up wrong, if I phrase things in questions rather than statements.
Now that I’m older, all that conversation serves me well, because I always have an anecdote about nearly anything, even if it’s not mine. I don’t take credit, I always say, I once met a guy who…
Not long ago, someone was amazed that I actually had something to contribute to some obscure subject, and somebody else said, “Oh, yeah, that’s Barney. He’s got a story for everything.”







