
eBook - ePub
The Serious Business of Small Talk
Becoming Fluent, Comfortable, and Charming
- 160 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Small talk has a big impactālearn to master this most important communication skill to feel more at ease at work, parties, and events of all kinds.
Ā
Carol Fleming wants to show you that small talk is not as small as you might think. It's the foundation of every relationship, professional and personal. It's the sound of people reaching out to each other, searching for similarities, shared interests, goodwill, connections, and friendship. And it's something that can be learned, even by those requiring the smallest of baby steps.
Ā
We engage in small talk every day with people we knowābut it feels a lot tougher when we go outside our comfort zone. This guide to graceful social conversation covers both inner and outer aspectsāfrom the right attitude to how to dress, move around, and introduce yourself. Most importantly, Fleming lays out a series of simple, memorable conversational strategies that make it easy to go from "Nice weather we're having" to a genuine, rewarding give-and-take.Ā
Ā
But she won't tell you what to say. Believe it or not, you already have what you need inside you. She merely provides the keys to unlock it!
Ā
Carol Fleming wants to show you that small talk is not as small as you might think. It's the foundation of every relationship, professional and personal. It's the sound of people reaching out to each other, searching for similarities, shared interests, goodwill, connections, and friendship. And it's something that can be learned, even by those requiring the smallest of baby steps.
Ā
We engage in small talk every day with people we knowābut it feels a lot tougher when we go outside our comfort zone. This guide to graceful social conversation covers both inner and outer aspectsāfrom the right attitude to how to dress, move around, and introduce yourself. Most importantly, Fleming lays out a series of simple, memorable conversational strategies that make it easy to go from "Nice weather we're having" to a genuine, rewarding give-and-take.Ā
Ā
But she won't tell you what to say. Believe it or not, you already have what you need inside you. She merely provides the keys to unlock it!
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Yes, you can access The Serious Business of Small Talk by Carol A. Fleming in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Desarrollo personal & Reuniones y presentaciones. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
The Basics
1
What Is Small Talk For?
DO YOU WANT NEW FRIENDS? START HERE.
You say small talk is a waste of time or a necessary evil. I say small talk is a very good thing indeed.
Letās define small talk as a light, pleasant, and safe verbal exchange that allows people the time and association to get a sense of each other before developing a deeper sense of relationship. When meeting new people, it consists of introductions, exchanges of personal information and interests, and searching for topics of mutual interest. With people already known to you, it involves the sharing of feelings, opinions, gossip, jokes, and observations.
Small talk implies aimlessness, where what is said is less important than the fact that we are actually saying something (anything!) to a particular person. Small talk has an important social-emotional role in life; it is universal, ubiquitous, and fundamental for knitting a society together.
Small talk is the language of relationship and friendship.
And you love small talk. (Oh, yes, you do!)
Do you doubt me? Take the following test:
Do you stop and chat as you pass a neighbor on the streets?
Do you āshoot the breezeā with the guys at the filling station?
Do you ādig the dirtā at the beauty parlor?
Do you āschmoozeā with your old friends?
Do you āchew the fatā with your coworkers?
Do you ākill timeā as you wait at the train station?
Do you āchillā with your buddies?
And youāre going to tell me that you hate doing all of those things? No, you are not. You just have never thought of these exchanges as being small talk, the heart and soul of the social communication flow that keeps you in touch with people and your community.
Human beings have a tendency to form Us/Them dichotomies and to favor the former. These conversations are comfortable for you because you perceive these people as being your tribe, your Us. We chat easily with āour folks.ā We stiffen up with the āelsewhereiansā whom weāre not so sure about.
You can read Robert Sapolskyās book Behave for his thorough review of the research on this concept. In it he shows us how much āUs/Them-ingā is subconscious stuff with biological underpinnings. For example, before you are even one year old, you are marking distinctions between sexes and races. You are also noticing if the language spoken to you sounds different from that of your mother tongue. Of course, the learned component is well known to us all:
Youāve got to be taught to hate and fear
Youāve got to be taught from year to year,
Itās got to be drummed in your dear little ear,
Youāve got to be carefully taught.
Youāve got to be taught to be afraid
Of people whose eyes are oddly made
And people whose skins are a different shade,
Youāve got to be carefully taught.
From South Pacific by Rodgers and Hammerstein
āDear little earsā is the scary part here. Us/Them distinctions learned early are the hardest ones to overcome. And Sapolsky writes that we make these Us/Them decisions in a fraction of a second, decisions that dictate our attitude and behavior toward a new person. Weāre talking about the mechanism of discrimination, arenāt we? By ādiscriminationā I mean simply that we can see a differenceābut when does a difference make a difference? Thatās another question.
From time to time, I call a friend from high school who has lived in a small town in eastern Washington all her life. Since high school, our lives have taken on dramatically different dimensions, which were never more clear than with the 2016 US presidential election.
ME: So, how you doing, Ellie?
ELLIE: Now, thatās a trick question! I aināt dead yet, howās that? Ya got your Trump sign on your lawn? (HAHAHA!)
ME: No, I donāt, but I know you do.
ELLIE: You got any Trump signs on your block?
ME: Nooo, donāt believe I do.
ELLIE: Yeah, but down there in San Francisco, youāve got a lot of . . . youāve got a lot of them . . .
ME: Are you asking about people of color, Ellie?
ELLIE: Yeah!
ME: The answer is, āYes, we do.ā
ELLIE: . . . and you . . . you talk to them, do you!?
ME: Yes, Ellie, I do.
In her words, tone, and context, Ellie was showing how clearly she saw the distinction between Us and Them.
Iāll quote now from the wonderful book by J. D. Vance, Hillbilly Elegy. The author, the hillbilly who made it to Yale, was back in his hometown of Middletown at a gas station.
As I realized how different I was from my classmates at Yale, I grew to appreciate how similar I was to the people back home. Most important, I became acutely aware of the inner conflict born of my recent success. On one of my first visits home after classes began, I stopped at a gas station . . . the woman at the nearest pump began a conversation, and I noticed that she wore a Yale T-shirt. āDid you go to Yale?ā I asked. āNo,ā she replied, ābut my nephew does. Do you?ā I wasnāt sure what to say. It was stupidāher nephew went to school there, for Christās sakeābut I was still uncomfortable admitting that Iād become an Ivy Leaguer . . .
I had to choose: Was I a Yale Law student, or was I a Middletown kid with hillbilly grandparents? If the former, I could exchange pleasantries and talk about New Havenās beauty; if the latter, she occupied the other side of an invisible divide and could not be trusted.

If you believe that prejudice based on any personal distinction is pernicious, then might I interest you in a mechanism for bridging the social gap, a tool available to everyone? Itās called small talk.
The small talker is on the front line of engaging with Thems. It makes Thems safe, it makes Thems welcomed. This can be fun for youāand there are also lots of reasons why it may be scary, like finding yourself on the tightrope, in front of a crowd, without a net, extending friendship to a person who has not yet qualified as an Us.
But these divisions are not immutable; they can be changed in the twinkling of the eye. A person once regarded as a Them can easily become an Us. I argue that this is truly the Serious Business of Small Talk.
This is what you want out of social conversation:
turning strangers into friends.
turning strangers into friends.
It is you and I with our friendly overtures to erstwhile strangers who can move the dial to greater circles of comfort and friendship. The talk may be small, but the impact is big. You negotiate the beginning of all relationships through appropriate small talk.
THE SERIOUS BUSINESS OF SMALL TALK
The serious business of small talk is:
⢠To bring people together
⢠To facilitate understanding and trust
⢠To find or confirm friendships
⢠To avoid conflict
⢠To expose you to different points of view
Got the picture? Small talk is your social future.
Now, how can you say you ājust hateā this? What I think you actually hate is that teensy-weensy small percentage of situations where you must negotiate a stone-cold start with a stranger.
You feel okay when a Them is selling something or giving directions. This shared purpose clarifies and comforts. And you can be with old friends and not have anything in particular to talk about and that feels okay too.
But to act overtly friendly with total strangers with nothing to talk about, possibly being witnessed by other peopleāthatās what you hate. You hate that flood of anxiety, the feeling of foolishness, the fear of the phony, the awkwardness of making it all up on the spot. Your emotional centers are on high alert: āWatch out, thereās a Them!ā
All of this Us/Them tension usually goes unacknowledged, as is the cognitive/emotional war going on inside your head. Your emotional brain is yelling, āStranger-danger!ā while your cognitive brain is trying to comply with the social expectation that you act as if you were already friends. And the cherry on top is that there is always the possibility of rejection!
I think thatās the small talk you hate, and who can blame you? It is painful!
These stressful situations call for a mechanism, a tool, an attitude for moving through the discomfort of bridging this social gap. The rituals and pleasantries of small talk are designed to deal with just these ambiguities. It starts with a smile, a hello, and an outstretched hand. If you can do this, we can get started with all the rest.
Small talk is a crucial social lubricant,
as valuable as wine or laughter.
as valuable as wine or laughter.
Small talk takes many forms. Remember the tofu analogy from the introduction? Its goal is to be easily digestible, readily available, and utterly bland, taking on the flavor of whatever context youāre in. At one extreme is the simple exchange of acknowledgement between people: one person knocks, the other opens the door. To not acknowledge the knock would be felt as an affront (but maybe thatās exactly what you want to communicate). The polite thing to do is to offer and acknowledge these greetings as a matter of course. It costs you nothing and engenders goodwill on your behalf. Itās just common courtesy to get something verbal going when you come into contact with someoneāeven if it is totally banal.
Small talk may not reveal your intellect,
but it does reveal your humanity.
but it does reveal your humanity.
Hereās something very interesting about small talk in an elevator. As a new person gets on, she may make the slightest of accidental eye contact with someone, and she may say, āGood day.ā The recipient will then acknowledge the greeting with a minimal response: āHello.ā And thatās it until the elevator stops.
Now, observe: If there has been such an exchange, these two people will also say something as one of them exits the elevator, even if they are complete strangers to each other.
Have a good one.
Take it easy.
Enjoy the rest of your day.
The door they knocked on ever so slightly was still open and needed closure. But if there hadnāt been a āhowdyā when one of them entered, there wouldnāt have been a āso long!ā when they exited. This is an example of the courtesies and rituals that characterize the first stages of chit-chat. It lays the foundation for further exchanges to ensue.
And this is why it is good practice to acknowledge people with some kind of greeting. A āhelloā or āgood dayā will do. Even a nod and a grunt can register as an acceptable acknowledgement. Later on, you may find yourself nodding to each other going down the hall. Youāll want that in your social pocket.
Oh yes! We ran into each other at the Fairmont, right?
Allow me to introduce myselfā¦
This could be the beginning of a relationship that can be useful to you.
Speaking of usefulness, people can have strong motives in initial conversational exchanges. We cannot characterize all of them as aimless, since there is an exploratory exchange going on. As an example, letās go to a commercial convention to observe some of the conversations going on.
On the convention floor:
Hello! Iām Joe Bailey with Lucky You! cosmetics. Iāve brought some product samples if youāre interested. Perhaps you can visit our booth so I can get to know you better.
Here, the greeting is the first face of networking, which is the social edge of marketing your business.
Now, at the bar:
Hey, baby! Can I buy you a drink? Iād like to get to know you better!
Now Joe is chatting up a woman. His intention is clear, and itās not cosmetics. Again, itās the early negotiating phase of relationship building. If this phase of social conversation has you stymied, believe me, the Internet is full of advice for you, usually from young men who have all kinds of tricks up their sleeves to achieve success.
Both examples qualify as a subset of small talk but with the degree of intent as the variable. Itās the invisible X factor behind the banalities in these early conversationsāthe sort-of hidden agendaāthat supplies much of the discomfort and uncertainty.
THE SERIOUS BUSINESS OF GOSSIP
MOM: Thumper, what did your father tell you?
THUMPER: āIf you canāt say something nice, donāt say nothing at all.ā
Thumperās daddy probably also told him:
Great minds discuss ideas.
Average minds discuss events.
Small minds discuss people.
Well, sorry...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- CONTENTS
- INTRODUCTION: How Do You Do?
- I: THE BASICS
- II: BECOMING EVEN MORE FLUENT, COMFORTABLE, AND CHARMING
- CONCLUSION: Small Talk Just May Be Bigger than You Think
- Resources
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author