Warrior 4 Jesus (post: 1262070) wrote:It's true that 'often' girls talk about nothing and us guys have a hard time listening in that sense, but if they say something of value we listen.
Don't we?
I would hhpe so o.o
The same can go for us women :-?
Warrior 4 Jesus (post: 1262070) wrote:It's true that 'often' girls talk about nothing and us guys have a hard time listening in that sense, but if they say something of value we listen.
Don't we?
Warrior 4 Jesus (post: 1262070) wrote:It's true that 'often' girls talk about nothing and us guys have a hard time listening in that sense, but if they say something of value we listen.
Don't we?
Kaligraphic (post: 1262079) wrote:Actually, one big reason for the communication divide is that men and women speak on entirely different levels. The way men operate is we either think or feel, but not at the same time on a single subject. We separate the factual from the emotional. We define reality and relationship separately. To us, communication is a way of exchanging information. When our girl asks "are you thirsty?" while on a long drive, our thought pattern goes (question-thirst?)->(body-no)->(mouth-"Nope, not thirsty.").
Women, though, operate on both levels at the same time, merging what we men keep separate. To them, a thought, and therefore a communication, has both a logical and an emotional component. When they ask "Are you thirsty?", they may be deciding whether or not they are thirsty themselves, and, because of how women perceive relationship, a man's statement of "No, I'm not thirsty." may mean to the woman "I don't care if you are thirsty.", because it cuts off the decision process for them.
This is also why women may infer anger or lack of feeling in a man, based off of the lack of emotional content in his communication. If a woman cares for a man, she'll want reassurance that he cares for her - thus the classic "how do I look?". It's phrased as a factual question, because the female mind tends to determine facts based on relationship. So affection is expected to translate to a positive response and disaffection a negative response. The male mind, of course, naturally thinks of the factual response, because guys hear it as a factual question.
Don't believe me that the feminine mind bases facts on relationship? Look at young girls who are close friends. Listen to then talk about something. Often, one will say, for example, something like "My mother has a pink dress.", to which the other will say "My mother has a pink dress too.", even though it isn't true. This is because the pink dress is irrelevant to the actual communication - it is friendship and coidentity that is being communicated here. The first girl is saying, if translated to something a male mind can understand, "I like you and trust you, and you are my friend, so I'm sharing my life with you.", while the second girl is saying, "I'm the same as you, and return the feeling.".
This is why many men who have been long married simply know that their wife looks good when she asks, and that the answer to "I'm worried about these bills." is sometimes "I love you, honey.". We may not speak it like a native, but it's like speaking Spanish in Southern California - knowing at least a few words helps you get by. That, and it can help you order that drink and sammich.
It's true that 'often' girls talk about nothing and us guys have a hard time listening in that sense, but if they say something of value we listen.
Don't we?
Warrior 4 Jesus (post: 1262070) wrote:It's true that 'often' girls talk about nothing and us guys have a hard time listening in that sense, but if they say something of value we listen.
Don't we?
Bobtheduck (post: 1261783) wrote:EDIT: I can't find the exact sketch I'm looking for, but this one (from the same show) deals with honesty too... Of a different sort.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Eng-pRT9uA&feature=related
minakichan wrote:Geh, I dunno, I think we can draw these lines between the ways girls and guys communicate/think, but are they really that distinct/divisive? Most people can definitely talk to the opposite sex fine, without all the drama, right? Or are all the people I know just abnormally well-adjusted genderless amoebas?
Doe Johnson (post: 1262155) wrote:Is the one you're thinking of the "What Do You Think?" one? Where she's trying to pick out something for the disco? Her dress is a little "loud."
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1262228) wrote:I think I a renewd respect for Dinosaur Comics in addition to my already quite considerable respect for them since they are so great.. XD
Warrior 4 Jesus (post: 1262304) wrote:Bobtheduck, you've encouraged me to buy Man Stroke Woman.
I love British comedy.
Kaligraphic wrote:Clearly, in defining the communication methods of several billion individuals in a single go, defined only by sex, any description that we can come up with will be flat out wrong for some of them. For any group of people that large, the best we can do is to give tendencies, and some people will exhibit those tendencies to greater or lesser degrees.
uc pseudonym (post: 1262661) wrote:Naturally. However, while you were articulating general trends (we could argue about whether those are representative elsewhere), minakichan's question asked if they were normative. This is a very different thing and I think we need to be careful not to create self-fulfilling prophecies by setting up gender expectations.
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