I once met a girl from wyoming at a rock festival here, we were standing in line to get into the front area. After a bit smalltalk, we reached the topic about cheering on concerts and on this festival. She asked me why so many people came here if they don't really like the bands, and if it is possible that they are just all waiting for the headliner? I was confused. How could she think that anybody here NOT likes the band? Well .. the frenetic applause wasn't enough for her definition of "liking" if you like a band you have to go all nuts and scream around, bang your head against the barriers etc, and after the next song she showed me, and i was almost deaf after that.
That got me somehow thinking, and over the past years, I made a few observations:
If you ask a friend here "How do you like my shirt" and he doesn't like it, he will tell you "I prefer your other shirt" or even more plain "The shirt sucks".
If you ask an english native speaker (yes i know, i am throwing the brits, canadians and americans in one pot here, but in my experience they behave very similar on that topic!) he will more likely say something distracting like "I think green fits better to your eyes!".
English people often even can't directly say "no". It has to be wrapped up in gentle words, which often gets missinterpreted as a weak or shy "yes".
"I'm wondering if we should take some more time" in reality means: "Oh my god, this is anything but good, you need to completely rework it". If you would tell them just "We need to rework this, you're working into the wrong direction." they would think you are totally rude - when you're just being honest.
And on the opposite, so that you can distinguish between fake and real happyness about something, they need to at least double their excitement when they really like something.
If you ask someone how he liked your country, there is an almost 99% chance that he will say "It was fantastic, i really enjoyed my stay". Which means .. "I'm glad I am leaving tomorrow". But if he really liked it he will say "It was FANTASTIC, totally AWESOME, i'd love to stay SO much longer" exaggerating as much as possible, so that you tend to give him a weird look and think that he might be making fun of you - but he needs all those exaggerations so that you can decide between a lied positive reaction and an honest (yet exaggerated) positive reaction. But who needs positive lies? If you spent some time in a country, I expect that you didn't see only good things. That you might be missing somethings from your homeland, that you also have seen some bad things that made you wonder or think. If I ask for your opinion I don't want to get my ego stroked as much as possible no matter what you really think. I ask for an honest, reflected opinion. I think many people are already that much used to politely lie, that they don't even notice the difference. If someone isn't totally exaggerating they must think he hates them!
That got me somehow thinking, and over the past years, I made a few observations:
If you ask a friend here "How do you like my shirt" and he doesn't like it, he will tell you "I prefer your other shirt" or even more plain "The shirt sucks".
If you ask an english native speaker (yes i know, i am throwing the brits, canadians and americans in one pot here, but in my experience they behave very similar on that topic!) he will more likely say something distracting like "I think green fits better to your eyes!".
English people often even can't directly say "no". It has to be wrapped up in gentle words, which often gets missinterpreted as a weak or shy "yes".
"I'm wondering if we should take some more time" in reality means: "Oh my god, this is anything but good, you need to completely rework it". If you would tell them just "We need to rework this, you're working into the wrong direction." they would think you are totally rude - when you're just being honest.
And on the opposite, so that you can distinguish between fake and real happyness about something, they need to at least double their excitement when they really like something.
If you ask someone how he liked your country, there is an almost 99% chance that he will say "It was fantastic, i really enjoyed my stay". Which means .. "I'm glad I am leaving tomorrow". But if he really liked it he will say "It was FANTASTIC, totally AWESOME, i'd love to stay SO much longer" exaggerating as much as possible, so that you tend to give him a weird look and think that he might be making fun of you - but he needs all those exaggerations so that you can decide between a lied positive reaction and an honest (yet exaggerated) positive reaction. But who needs positive lies? If you spent some time in a country, I expect that you didn't see only good things. That you might be missing somethings from your homeland, that you also have seen some bad things that made you wonder or think. If I ask for your opinion I don't want to get my ego stroked as much as possible no matter what you really think. I ask for an honest, reflected opinion. I think many people are already that much used to politely lie, that they don't even notice the difference. If someone isn't totally exaggerating they must think he hates them!



