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Turning Strangers Into
FriendsDo you find it easy
to make conversation with new people you’ve just met? Or
does the thought of trying to make conversation with
someone new make you break out in a cold sweat?
If you don’t feel comfortable making casual conversation with
new people you have just met, you will find it harder to make
new friends. You will also find it more difficult to fit in at
your work place.
One of the most common reasons that people have difficulty
making conversation with someone they don’t know very well is
because they put too much pressure on themselves.
They think they have to really put up a great performance to
impress the other person. They don’t just let themselves just
be ordinary, and talk about fairly ordinary things.
Here’s a very important lesson to learn about making
conversation with people: When you insisting to yourself that
you have to be brilliant and dazzling in all your conversations
this belief will not win you new friends. It will not even
improve your conversational performance.
When you think to yourself that you have to perform perfectly
in all your conversations, you will actually make your
performance worse! You will become too nervous and awkward, and
you’ll be too focused on your own performance. You won’t be
focused on getting to know the new person you’ve just met.
New people that you meet are not looking for brilliant
conversation. What they are looking for is someone who will be
comfortable to be with, and fun to talk to. But most of all
they are looking for someone who seems interested in them!
For conversational success, it’s more important to be a good
listener than to be a great talker.
When you are just starting out talking to a person, you can use
your immediate surroundings or the weather as a basis for a few
starting remarks.
If you want to know that person better, move on quickly to a
slightly more personal level of discussion. Ask a few basic
questions and offer a little bit of information about yourself,
your likes or dislikes, or your opinion on some neutral topic.
Notice whether the other person lights up with interest about
any topics you mention.
This can give you new interesting areas for both of you to
discuss.
Even if it seems somewhat difficult and awkward for you in the
beginning, develop the habit of introducing yourself to others
as soon as you meet them, or very early in the conversation.
Otherwise you could spend hours talking and neither of you will
have any idea of what your conversation partner’s name is.
Socially confident people introduce themselves to their
conversation partners very early in the course of conversation.
People who are shy or socially awkward tend to introduce
themselves much later, or not at all. Shy people often wait
until someone asks for their name, but they rarely volunteer to
give it, and they rarely ask the other person what their name
is.
Sometimes it is easier to ask the other person for their name
first, and then offer your own. If you practice the new
behavior enough times, it will eventually become second nature
to you. With enough practice, it will no longer seem
intimidating to take a more active role.
The important thing is simply to develop the habit of starting
simple little conversations with lots more people. Look for the
interests you have in common.
If you want to be more socially successful, take the initiative
to introduce yourself to new people and to get the
conversational ball rolling. Don’t hold back and let other
people make all the first moves. If you have been holding back,
waiting for other people to do all the work in the
relationship, you are shirking your responsibility in making
the relationship move forward.
Show interest in other people. Smile. Listen. Look at the
person you’re talking with..
Whenever you start talking to new people, don’t strive for
great dialogue, or the perfect opening lines. Just get started,
and keep on talking. Practice making conversations with a lot
of new people. You will eventually get better at it.
Don’t decide that you’re a failure if the encounter doesn’t
turn into a great friendship. After all, the truth is that the
majority of conversations between new people don’t really go
anywhere. That’s all right. It takes time and effort to turn
casual strangers into friends.
Remember, that all of the friends you already have were
strangers to you at one point in your life. Until you started
talking and found out what you have in common.
Learning how to make conversation with people you don’t know
well can be the first step in making many new friends.
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broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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