Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 208 total)
  • What are your social anxieties…?
  • Junkyard
    Free Member

    Neither if us would have our wallets Binners 😉

    I have had £6 meals with no drinks and folk want £20 + as they got pissed and ate steak.

    Interesting that you are seen as weird/tight/ stingy for expecting to pay for what you had but expecting others to pay for what you had is fine.

    Do you split the travel costs if someone came further than you and their taxi ride is more expensive 😉
    FWIW it really depends if its £8 and the bill is a tenner I am not going to get arsed but there is a point where I am not paying for your food/beer.

    peterfile
    Free Member

    Meeting anyone off a forum is odd – “Hello, I’m Woblywib37”. That’s why I always just use my name.

    Me too Ben, me too.

    dirtycrewdom
    Free Member

    I have a real problem remembering names and faces. Apparently there is some sort of ‘ism’ regarding this but its more likely I just can’t be bothered subconsciously.

    However it is regularly embarrassing as most people I have previously met just think I am ignoring them.

    Sometimes it backfires though and I start conversations with people I’ve never met before.

    Haha I never remember names but everyone remembers me. I just use “man” a lot and assume I have met most people. I’ve lost count of the number of times that I’ve introduced myself to people I’ve met before. Even multiple times!

    weeksy
    Full Member

    I have had £6 meals with no drinks and folk want £20 + as they got pissed and ate steak.

    Interesting that you are seen as weird/tight/ stingy for expecting to pay for what you had but expecting others to pay for what you had is fine.

    But if you came out and ordered a massive steak, drank wine etc, i wouldn’t argue with splitting the bill… it’s call friendship 🙂

    fasthaggis
    Full Member

    I worry about other people in the group worrying about me not worrying enough.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Me too Ben, me too.

    😀

    kayak23
    Full Member

    I have a ‘not even bothered’ climbing face, or at least I have to put on a not even bothered climbing face if I see someone.

    If I’m riding on the road, up a hill and maybe struggling a bit, but then a car starts coming down the other way, I seem to have to temporarily hold my breath and make it seem like I’m not knackered until they pass and I can then gasp for breath and nearly collapse again like normal.

    The same is true out on the trail. If some riders are stopped halfway up the hill, I can’t seem to not try to pretend that I’m not in the least bit bothered by the hill…

    Apart from that, I also have millions of other weird social anxieties. Don’t we all?
    🙂

    brakes
    Free Member

    With my wifes family you have to go and give everyone a hug & kiss or handshake every time you go round or leave

    snap!
    does my head in. I can tell people don’t want to do it too, so why does everyone bother?
    plus I sometimes go into automatic pilot and end up giving Uncle Patrick a kiss on the cheek…

    PiknMix
    Free Member

    Social anxiety’s wow I’m bipolar so my whole life is social anxiety!
    Except the manic days, then not only have I bought everyone a drink, I know their name, occupation, bar staffs name, managers name, phoned the owner up and bought his pub! Manic days can be great, unanxious but usually rather costly.

    emsz
    Free Member

    Will talk to anyone, but used to worry what they thought of me.

    Junky, your not really for the meal your paying for the night with your friends, split the bill equally

    scuzz
    Free Member

    40mph – prosopagnosia is the proper term for ‘face blindness’, but I suspect that your 2nd explanation may be more true.

    I first realised I had this when I got punched into a fight, the police got involved and I couldn’t pick the guy out from a row of printed mugshots. Funnily enough though, he was walking into the police station when I walked out and I recognised him straight away because of his walk, height, outfit, twitches, smell etc.

    As a result, I often have women come up to me asking where they recognise me from – it’s great fun, I haven’t got a clue whether they’re my mate’s girlfriend’s friend who was at that party the other night, my old mate’s sister in law, or whether they’re tring to chat me up.
    I always assume they’re a complete stranger who thought I looked attractive enough to start a conversation with, it makes the conversation more fun and memorable, although I still wouldn’t recognise them if I saw them again week later!

    It doesn’t work so well for blokes though.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    So if we went to the funfair and we all had different rides and someone did not go on any we should all still split the bill as its the day out with friends?

    I should have just said that argument you get when you refuse to split a bill 😉

    amedias
    Free Member

    Not splitting meals drives me nuts. If I’m out with friends, we will always split the bill whatever. I cannot stand people who get their phone out and start totting up what they’ve ordered, I find it cheap and embarrassing. I know that next time I’ll have a few glasses of wine or a more expensive dinner than them and it’ll even itself up.

    It must be nice to be in a position where the cost of a meal out is so trivial to you.

    I’m with Junky on this one, me and the other half are both non-drinkers, a meal out with friends (which we have to save up for BTW and pay attention to what we order to keep in budget) can turn in to a total anxiety fest for us when the bill comes and our friends expect us to pay significantly more than the cost of what we ate because they drank alcohol, yeah sure £2 here or there is nothing, but eating/drinking <£20 worth and then being expected to fork out >£30 each is just not fair.

    You might think it’s OK once in a while too, and so would I, but when it’s almost EVERY time you go out it starts to grate when you’re seeing other people drink your next weeks worth of food…

    Fortunately for us our real friends appreciate the above and don’t seem to have a problem with it.

    also…needing to use a phone to add up cost of a meal? really?

    davidtaylforth
    Free Member

    You don’t pay for a night out with your friends!

    brakes
    Free Member

    with funfairs you either pay for entry to the fair, or pay per ride.
    you don’t pay as you leave do you?

    cbmotorsport
    Free Member

    I have had £6 meals with no drinks and folk want £20 + as they got pissed and ate steak.

    Interesting that you are seen as weird/tight/ stingy for expecting to pay for what you had but expecting others to pay for what you had is fine.

    In this case, I’d not expect you to pay the full amount. If a mate’s driving for example, and we’re all getting stuck into the red wine, we’d probably just cover his meal, or he’d chip in a token amount.

    cbmotorsport
    Free Member

    I have a ‘not even bothered’ climbing face, or at least I have to put on a not even bothered climbing face if I see someone.

    Me too…. 😳

    brakes
    Free Member

    is that anxiety or pride?

    RustySpanner
    Full Member

    40mpg – Member

    I have a real problem remembering names and faces.
    Me too.

    Working with a lady earlier this week:

    Me: So, how long have you worked with the company?
    Her: About 7 years.
    Me: Odd that I’ve not met you before.
    Her: I interviewed you and offered you the job.
    Me: 😳

    emsz
    Free Member

    Ok, if I’ve asked you out for a meal and I know you can afford it, but you don’t wanna split it just “because” then that’s the last time you get to look at my tits* in a low cut top

    If you can’t afford it, so we’re each paying our own, that’s different

    * good luck with that

    weeksy
    Full Member

    It must be nice to be in a position where the cost of a meal out is so trivial to you.

    I’m sorry you’re poor… but it’s not my fault 🙁

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    I think I could easily make your disastrous dates list 😉
    Fair deal emsz but you are a student I would probably pay anyway.
    Its not really an issue with two folk eating though it is with a large group you tend to have probs.
    Its weird that I have to pay for their booze or else I look bad yet in most other scenarios you pay for what you have. 😥

    Peyote
    Free Member

    I’m sorry you’re poor… but it’s not my fault

    You can empathise though.

    grum
    Free Member

    My main one is greeting people/saying goodbyes.

    Shaking hands with blokes seems slightly formal and crap with people you are friends with, but I would only really man-hug really good mates. Embarrassing ‘cool dude’ handshakes are generally cringey too. What to do?

    With women – do you still shake hands when first meeting? Then do they get a kiss on the cheek, or do you have to be actual friends first? Kiss plus little hug or just a kiss (or sometimes just the hug)? Which cheek? Both?

    It’s a bloody minefield! 😳

    I’ve made up the difference before when someones argued that they only had this or that and shouldn’t be paying this much. Funnily enough, I don’t go out for dinner with them again.

    Yip. And in my experience Its always the ones on the highest salaries, with the biggest, Germanist cars, dressed head to toe in designer gear, who chip in with “but I didn’t have any garlic bread…..”

    strokers!

    There’s definitely the opposite in nobbishness though where people order steaks and loads of expensive wine and expect everyone to split the bill, ignoring how skint/teetotal they might be.

    amedias
    Free Member

    It must be nice to be in a position where the cost of a meal out is so trivial to you.
    I’m sorry you’re poor… but it’s not my fault

    That wasn’t my point at all, it was about lack of understanding and empathy for your friends circumstances rather than sympathy.

    If you had a mate who was hard up and you knew would struggle to split a bill like that on a meal out would you just not invite them? expect them to pay for a chunk of your food/drink when you knwo they are currently struggling? or just agree to pay for what you each had?

    wrecker
    Free Member

    I’m not good in big crowds of people. I don’t like being shoulder to shoulder at all. I don’t know why, perhaps because I’ve spent a large period being in open spaces. It took my wife quite a while to figure it out but she’s used to it now and makes allowances for me.

    amedias
    Free Member

    I’ve made up the difference before when someones argued that they only had this or that and shouldn’t be paying this much. Funnily enough, I don’t go out for dinner with them again.

    Ah, I see, You’ll only stay friends with people that can afford you? how much does one have to pay for that privilege?

    😉

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Food and drink get treated separately. Everyone who’s eaten splits the food bill, everyone who had drinks splits the drinks bill. Simple.

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    Embarrassing ‘cool dude’ handshakes are generally cringey too. What to do?

    AAAAAAARGH! This seems to be something that’s very much de rigeur for your average middle class white chap these days, all calling each other “Bro” and doing those stupid handshakes.

    Hateful.

    RustySpanner
    Full Member

    Edit.

    I misconstrued your candid approach. 🙂

    weeksy
    Full Member

    If you had a mate who was hard up and you knew would struggle to split a bill like that on a meal out would you just not invite them? expect them to pay for a chunk of your food/drink when you knwo they are currently struggling? or just agree to pay for what you each had?

    If they’re a mate and are skint, they’re paying none of the bill.

    Although i don’t actually have a friend who would A. Admit it…. or B. come out if they were skint.

    I’d rather they just tell me “can’t afford it….” i can then talk them into coming out and it being my treat and they’ll get the next one when they’re more flush.

    wrecker
    Free Member

    I get pissed off having to pay for other peoples kids to eat and drink.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    I’m not good in big crowds of people. I don’t like being shoulder to shoulder at all. I don’t know why,

    It’s an evolutionary thing – we evolved in small groups, where everyone knew everyone. Anyone you didn’t know was an enemy.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    if they are mates id expect them to offer to pay the right amount

    that aside I fear choosing the wrong checkout at the supermarket
    the checkout operator may look fast but then they may turn out to be slow or chatty or the customer infront is awkward in someway

    and if the other checkout I chose not to go for has 3 people get served while im still waiting im filled with a white hot rage

    weeksy
    Full Member

    wrecker – Member
    I get pissed off having to pay for other peoples kids to eat and drink.

    MAybe i’m nicer than i thought.

    When i go out with my family and my sisters family it’s 3 against 7…. however the bill still gets split 50-50. Her ‘kids’ are all mid teen/old teen.

    amedias
    Free Member

    Now you sound more reasonable weeksy, looking after your mates is what real friends do, but it’s a tricky situation especially when it’s not necessarily a short term thing…

    For example, how many times would you offer to pay for them before you got tired of ‘treating’?

    And how many times would they accept before feeling bad?

    That’s why it leads to points A and B…

    Financial disparity among friends can be a source of much angst over time, a lot depends on the specifics of the relationships obviously but it can be a very thorny issue and reluctance to discuss it makes it so much worse!

    Mackem
    Full Member

    I get very nervous talking to people I dont know and end up talking utter shite. Consequently a lot of people’s first impression is that I’m a bit odd.

    davidtaylforth
    Free Member

    emsz – Member

    Ok, if I’ve asked you out for a meal and I know you can afford it, but you don’t wanna split it just “because” then that’s the last time you get to look at my tits* in a low cut top

    If you can’t afford it, so we’re each paying our own, that’s different

    * good luck with that

    What if they paid full whack? Do they get to cop a feel?

    Or, if you kept a cardy on, then they’d be able to afford a starter or dessert aswell. But would you be prepared to sit there and watch them eat it?

    binners
    Full Member

    All this is proving is that some people seem to have really tight-wad mates. And that couldn’t possibly be the case! Could it……?

    weeksy
    Full Member

    For example, how many times would you offer to pay for them before you got tired of ‘treating’?

    And how many times would they accept before feeling bad?

    There’s no limit with me…. simple as that. A friend is just that… therefore gets anything and everything within my power.

    How many times would they accept… IME not many…. but i am quite pushy.

    Over the years i’ve had mates move in with me into my flats, they’ve paid £0 in rent/bills as they were struggling lots at the time…. they’ve stated up to a year… which admittedly was an inconvenience to me… but i never questioned it.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 208 total)

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