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Why Do I Have To Be Polite?!

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I will bring the donuts and the double double!!
I had to look up what double double is and found that it's a typically Canadian way to order coffee with two sugars and two creams. I never heard of it before. Now I know I'm weird.

This thread seems to have diverged enough to intersect with the one on cultural myth busting, probably my favourite so far next to the one on things you would never say to your therapist. :-)
 
I just wish I knew how to not be nice once in a while when called for, without feeling terrible about myself.

To be polite but stop conversations use closed statements and never fill silences. Smile politely and watch the conversation naturally reach a dead end with this tactic. It will take some practice to do this on-demand, but it's natural for most people to fall into when they feel no connection so it's not rude, but it sure does shut down conversations.
 
express silence to him
I like gizmo's way to stay silent when someone bad tries to converse with you. Being silent is like stay very strong deep within, no matter what the other person lashing, making faces or anything they want. Just stand speechless and unaffected by bad people. Let them think you are weak or anything, but deep within you know you are silent because you are very strong and you can stand through any storm.

I do this here to my abusers and lately it seems to be working. At least I don't get upset too quickly and feel even more strong deep within.

Thank you everyone, learned so many things today. :)
 
This thread seems to have diverged
Sorry everyone. We were having a Canadian bonding moment.
To be polite but stop conversations use closed statements and never fill silences.
Hmmm, I used to teach people how to do this using written correspondence. Why I didn't put this together with verbal, I don't know. Brilliance @ghotiff, thank you!
@Tanishq I think I project after reading your post. I feel if I am silent that I am dismissing and not hearing which is a real 'button' for me. However if I think about the nature of the beast as @Recovery4Me so eloquently described in the post above....hmmmm. This realization may very well help me.
Thank you everyone, learned so many things today. :)
Ditto that.
 
today I was out walking and ran into him doing the same, and he was in a chatty mood and stopped me to talk, wanting to know everything from my opinions on religion to my favourite leisure activities, even inviting me out (I got out of that one). He's outwardly so charming, it's hard to disengage without feeling like I am being rude. This went on until I made up some excuse about something I had to do at home. But why do I even care about being rude to someone like that? I want to say "I know who you really are, and I want nothing to do with you, good riddance!"
I hate being polite but I hate being the bad guy even worse or having people think that I'm some horrible person or something.

It seems like this is a black and white way to view things. Your conclusion is that in order to be polite and nice, you must listen to him ramble on and on and talk to him much longer than you would like. If you don't do that, then you are rude, and thus your other option is to tell him good riddance!

I think that there is another way to look at this. Hmmm, how do I say this...?

Boundaries can be the most polite and nice and respectful thing to do for others, and ourselves. Listening to someone talk on and on can be more about our desire to avoid the very real discomfort (and even fear) of gently setting a very real boundary, than it really is about being polite to the other person.


If I was talking on and on to someone who didn't want to talk to me, or even have a connection with me, I would feel like it was actually rude and disrespectful to me for them to just keep talking with me.

Narcissists tend to be drawn towards people with crap boundaries. I have an uncle who is a very classic and strong narassict. When my boundaries are weak, he is drawn to me like a fly is to honey. Oh dear, it is so hard to handle. Eventually I toughen up and gently draw the line, both in words and inside myself. He tends to loose all interest in talking to me when I am respectfully clear that I don't want to talk to him.

For you, this might be a chance to learn stronger boundaries too - which is actually the most respectful way to treat another person. The most polite way to be. For both of you.

The next time you encounter him, and you feel scared to say "no, I can't talk now" - remember the politeness sometimes means saying "No." Or "I can't talk now" or "I need some space" or etc. It can be more polite that continuing to engage him and let him think that you do want to talk with him. It is so easy to say, and hard to do. I'm sorry that you have to live right next door to someone like him!
 
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