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One of those life lessons which I have taken on in my dotage is about eye contact.

Think about it. In face to face interaction, it is the most important thing.

Turn that around. I have learned in meetings that if I deny someone my eye contact it is a powerful thing.

Similarly, I have developed a ten thousand yard stare in public which does make people keep their distance.

Don't get me wrong, I like YouTube clips of cats, indie folk and cashmere so I think I'm a nice person. My observation is simply that eye contact is the most powerful social contact. Its presence means much, and its absence means much more.

Palindromeman 7 Apr 23
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13 comments

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1

I completely agree! There is so much you can learn about a person (and their verbal responses) when you look them straight in the eye. Much harder to truly understand a persons intentions by mere texting. On the other hand peering non stop into ones eyes can border on β€˜creepy’.

0

Aww your hashtags lead me to believe there was a link to cat videos on youtube 😟

2

Most of my life I avoided eye contact because of social anxiety. Often I'd just wear sunglasses. Now I'm some better about it, but I do have a tendency to let my gaze wander around when I talk to someone. Old habits are hard to break.

When I am not being a total arsehole, I find this interesting about eye contact. When someone is talking to me (assuming that I an interested in what they are saying) I maintain perfect eye contact. As soon as I talk, I need to train somewhere else.

@Palindromeman
I do look at people while they talk. It helps me remember what they've said.

@maritime37 I'm good at remembering faces but terrible with names. So, yes, if you want to hear what someone says, I agree eye contact helps. Especially if you are flirting πŸ™‚

1

your eyes say so much more than your mouth

Now you are going all Peter Gabriel on me:

@Palindromeman nothing wrong with that my friend.

0

Psych games come in handy for certain types of acting.
Interactive ( guerilla ) theater is fun.

Lots of ways to unnerv or manage people if you need to. As well ways to counter those tactics.

1

I love my stare too... I've used it on others trying to use it on me...

I especially like when I am accosted in public and I don't even look at the person (almost certainly a guy) - it disconcerts them.

2

I make powerful eye contact because it was beat into me as a child. Personally I'd rather not look in eyes. I dislike it. Not because I'm submissive or anything but because it forces me to socialize on some level

Regard it as a tool. Make it work for you. Well, that's what I do.

1

The no eye contact can be devistating. I have used it before and still do. ?

3

I hate eye contact. Humans are the only species on the entire planet that think it's anything other than the threat it is. Humans are crazy.

It's true, we have all the nuclear weapons, we are not the nicest species on the planet.

4

Yes. And I’m still learning… One reason I’ll admit to a (bit of) phone phobia is likely due to the fact I can’t see the person’s eyes.. Not looking for a β€˜window to their soul,’ but at least to determine whether they’re listening or understand.

Was in DC a couple years ago for around 3 months. It took me nearly that long to determine, it wasn’t that the people were cold, rarely looking you in the eyes, they were actually giving you what little privacy or β€˜space’ there was to be had. After concluding that, then confirming it with a long-time friend & resident, I really β€˜warmed to them.’

Literally heading South.. back down into Virginia, where people acknowledge your presence with eye contact and a smile ..I fell in love ...and now it’s home. Damn, they wave, too! But there are times I’ll find myself staring ten-thousand yards off … but that’s just me.. And if I trip, folks are smiling πŸ™‚

Varn Level 8 Apr 23, 2018

Copy that.

I grew up in the city of Brisbane in Australia. Then, it was a big country town. People acknowledged you. Then at 21 I moved to Canberra. The nation's capital! People would not say boo to a goose to you. And that was fine, I fitted in. I recently moved to regional Australia, and these folks are much friendly. I'm adjusting my social approach.

4

I think refraining from making eye contact conveys passivity and social avoidance. At least that’s how I typically feel when others refrain from making eye contact.

Personally, I make it aggressive. Deliberately freezing someone out is an interesting experience. But, then, I never said I'm a nice person.

That makes sense, I avoid eye contact and being social with equal skill.

1

Well ya, positive vs negative reinforcements ?

Emme Level 7 Apr 23, 2018
4

Sometimes culture influences eye contact. In some cultures direct eye contact is avoided.

Isn't it also a gender issue in some places?

That is true.

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