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Meeting new people who only talk about themselves

(93 Posts)
Optomistic1 Sun 30-Jun-24 23:07:28

I am currently on a solos holidays which took me a lot of courage to come on. There are some nice people here but I can't believe how most people only ever talk about themselves. Hardly anyone has asked me anything about me and I am starting to feel invisible. I think I am normally quite a confident and fairly out going person but there are a couple of people who are dominating conversations and I have realised it just makes me want to retreat

I have been beating myself up today thinking I must be really boring and now just want to come home....

lemsip Wed 03-Jul-24 10:14:38

If I'm in a group and one person is monopolizing the conversation another person should break in by asking a '
did anyone see question so changing subject and letting others in!

Baggs Wed 03-Jul-24 11:20:29

keepingquiet

Reminds me of a time I was at a table with a load of strangers. One woman said she could tell which women made their gravy from scratch and which made it from granules... I had nothing to contribute to that conversation.

This made me laugh and would have done at the time 😂

I'd have asked her which 'category' I belonged to.

Baggs Wed 03-Jul-24 11:27:04

travelsafar

If people go on a solo holiday it's usually because they are single.
Therefore they only have themself to talk about and there opinions to express. What else are they going to talk about?? They could also be anxious and feel like they have to keep the conversation going or as someone else said perhaps they are lonely and don't get out much so go into overdrive trying to appear interesting to others. They could of course just be selfish rude people. 🤔🤔

⬆️ This ⬆️

Or if not selfish then just socially inept. I have a relation who talks at people at a great rate. As another relation said recently: "There are no pauses for anyone else to chip an and converse!"

It can be quite wearing but the person I'm talking about has the kindest heart and really does mean well. They are (pedants, should that be It is? when not wanting to reveal the sex of the person?) a lonely individual as well.

kircubbin2000 Wed 03-Jul-24 11:58:11

lemsip

If I'm in a group and one person is monopolizing the conversation another person should break in by asking a '
did anyone see question so changing subject and letting others in!

I was in a group like that and she just ignored attempts to break on. She appeared not to notice the eye rolls and expressions of some of us. A lot in that group had a very basic education and were bemused by her theories on Mrs Bennett and the various Austen and Bronte characters.Blank looks.

keepingquiet Wed 03-Jul-24 13:00:16

Baggs

keepingquiet

Reminds me of a time I was at a table with a load of strangers. One woman said she could tell which women made their gravy from scratch and which made it from granules... I had nothing to contribute to that conversation.

This made me laugh and would have done at the time 😂

I'd have asked her which 'category' I belonged to.

I left and went to the pub! They had a band on and I won something in the raffle.

Eloethan Wed 03-Jul-24 13:58:32

keepingquiet That made me laugh. You seem like great fun.

keepingquiet Wed 03-Jul-24 15:34:32

Eloethan thankyou. That's the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me on here!

hollysteers Wed 03-Jul-24 17:09:34

It’s tough if you are at an evening dinner and can’t get away from a bore.
I made the mistake of mentioning a slight interest in family history to the chap on my left. Turned out he was researching his family tree, so took me back to the Norman Conquest, butcher, baker and candlestick maker…

V3ra Wed 03-Jul-24 17:27:15

A lot in that group had a very basic education and were bemused by her theories on Mrs Bennett and the various Austen and Bronte characters.Blank looks.

kircubbin2000 definitely a case of "know your audience" here.
I like to think someone would have been quick to say, "Heavens, I didn't know we were doing an O-Level English lesson today."

MissAdventure Wed 03-Jul-24 17:29:14

I was about to say that.
Their eyes were probably glazed over from boredom.

Eloethan Wed 03-Jul-24 23:08:00

In my experience, socialising with people I don't know well can be very stressful.

I think I am a good listener and that is perhaps because I find it easier to listen and respond than to actually start a conversation. It is difficult to know what to talk about, and how to progress from one subject to another (to avoid being seen as a "bore"), or how to politely extricate oneself from a conversation that seems to have run its course.

I find these things difficult, as I am sure many people do. There are, of course, people who enjoy social situations and who are "the life and soul of the party". It must be nice to be like that.

Esmay Fri 05-Jul-24 12:40:36

It was unthinkable before , but I'd consider a singles holiday .
I really miss my old friends -all of them have moved away and some of them abroad .
I've been invited to stay , but most of these friends have a new man ! At first , everything seems rosy and then I've noticed that the cuckoo effect has ensued .
From their messages, I gather that their menfolk don't like , enjoy nor appreciate any visits from their parents , children ,
siblings let alone old friends .
Difficult !
This week , I met up with one of my newer friends .
She chose the day , time and the venue .
As she's so much busier than I am I went with her preferences .
Before I arrived she was on the blower .
Where exactly was I ?
It was ten minutes before we met and I wasn't late .
She met me at the bustop and not I the cafe .
As we walked to the cafe .I had the itinerary recited yet again -I'd heard it the day before.
Sitting in the cafe I had to listen to the lists of her illnesses ,
past illnesses /examinations /operations and the forthcoming one .
It's minor , but they've decided to give her a general anaesthetic .
Then the allergies -none of which have been confirmed by a doctor or health professional .
Then the phobias .
The itinerary yet again .
We went to the supermarket having not had time for lunch .
It was yet another occasion when I felt slotted in at a momentary pause in her frantic day .
I realise that on the promise of a cinema trip or some other thing that I'm looking forward to that I'm just strung along .
She doesn't have any friends and I felt sorry for her as I do think that her family are breathtakingly selfish .
My friends don't like her .
Not once did she ask me about the heat stroke that I had last week .
Neither has she bothered to ask me about the serious repetitive chest infections that I've had since last November .
I wonder if her main interest in me is selling me stuff .
Sadly , I think that it is .
It's fine .
Sometimes my Christian principles get in the way of recognising negativity in people .
I've always got to think the very best and make endless allowances for them .
After five years and things definitely getting worse over the lastctwo years - ill health and regarding my time left on earth as increasingly precious -I am fed up being used .
There isn't going to be a major row , but a gradual slow cooling off period .
Sorry -correcting typos seems to delete my post !

Etoile2701 Fri 05-Jul-24 21:54:36

Me too.

Aveline Sat 06-Jul-24 07:39:14

Eloethan once, years ago, we were invited to a dinner party. I was struck dumb on arrival when the hostess said,
'Now Aveline I'm relying on you to be the life and soul of the party' !! Eek. Awful memory.

Imarocker Sat 06-Jul-24 08:35:00

I have a friend who lives on her own and when I visit she talks non stop for the first two days only about herself. I have another widowed friend whom I have noticed now never listens to what I am saying. It happens to a lot of people who live on their own. There is an article in today’s Times about initiating conversations called The Ford Method: Family, occupation, recreation, dreams. Perhaps asking people questions from one of these headings will initiate a better conversation eg., what are your plans for the next two years? Personally, I usually fall back on ‘what are you reading’ or ‘can you recommend me a good book’.

loopyloo Sat 06-Jul-24 08:45:48

That's good. My DH says he has bought the Times and will bring it home from work.
Yes conversation. An art. My Dd loves social events but she tends to dominate the conversation. Difficult to get a word in edge ways.
How to manage conversation is a bit like being a referee.

kircubbin2000 Sat 06-Jul-24 16:20:37

My poor DIL who is foreign had a difficult dinner last week. A lovely elderly couple my son is friendly with had them down for a meal. They misunderstood her job with a charity and thought she was volunteering in a shop to amuse herself . She also had no input to the conversation about the local vicar and village life.