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This sounds just like my interactions with people in the street. You have described it quite well. Here, in Australia, people seem to diffuse this by saying “hello”. It is not necessarily friendly but nor is it hostile.Depends upon the situation. It's not something that I perceive as "difficult", per se, but rather something that can be unconscious and sometimes inappropriate given the situation.
Examples:
2. At work at the hospital. We have a big hospital with long hallways. I would see someone I was acquainted with walking towards me, well, I made the mistake of looking at them as they approached, and just as they passed me they would eye avert and "ghost" me. I could never figure out that behavior, because EVERYONE did it. What the heck was going on? These were the same people that I could have a cordial conversation with in any other circumstance. Come to find out decades later that there IS a way that is socially acceptable. Evidently, by looking at this other person as they approach, they will subconsciously sense this as "threatening behavior" and will not make eye contact with you. The proper way to approach is to not look at them directly and make eye contact until you are say, 10-20 feet away, then quickly look up, make eye contact, greet them, and then move on. The entire interaction taking only 1-2 seconds. After I learned this technique, no more issues.
This is a technique I taught my university students - quick eye contact with individuals in a large group. For them, it meant making contact with an individual rather than being overwhelmed by the crowd, “each individual feels you’re talking to them”, for me it was “keep them engaged but with brief-enough contact that I don’t get overwhelmed.”3. I am an educator at a university and within the hospital. I am a mentor. So, working with students, with new employees, young physicians in training, I do spend a fair amount of my day talking to people. I have this subconscious habit of eye aversion while I am discussing topics. I will make eye contact with them initially, but once I get into "monologue mode" my eyes drift away into space. Sometimes I catch myself, sometimes I don't. I know for a fact, I keep people's attention and interaction much better if I am looking into the eyes of my students, quickly making my eyes connect with every individual in the room. However, this is a very conscious effort. It does not come naturally and as such, is not a consistent behavior with me.
I didn't get so much pushback, but when I try to make eye contact, people tell me I stare at them and that it's creepy, so I gave up on trying. Being tall and broad-shouldered might play a role. I tend to scare people off by "giving them an angry look". I don't hestitate to argue and criticise and they can probably feel that an attack is coming.However, at 5'11" and 265lbs of muscle, I was perceived as "intimidating" to some people because I was looking at them. Not intentional. They never interacted with me, but a complaint was made, and I was quietly asked by the manager to not come back to that gym anymore, and my membership cancelled. Lesson there: Don't look at people while at the gym.
Never punch down. (I tried to find an emoticon to go here but nothing seemed appropriate.) I did not mean to criticise, but felt the relative level only applied to a subset of interactions. (Did you explicitly mean the gendered interpretation?) I think I do take your meaning.
I don't understand. Punch down? What is the gendered interpretation?Never punch down. (I tried to find an emoticon to go here but nothing seemed appropriate.) I did not mean to criticise, but felt the relative level only applied to a subset of interactions. (Did you explicitly mean the gendered interpretation?) I think I do take your meaning.
I know it was not your intention, but your examples make me very sad.Depends upon the situation. It's not something that I perceive as "difficult", per se, but rather something that can be unconscious and sometimes inappropriate given the situation.
Examples:
1. Years ago. I am in the gym working out. Now, for context, I was a national-level powerlifter. I was serious about my training. I am not a socializer. Get in, train hard, get out. Very focused. However, in between sets I would rest for 30-60 seconds, perhaps lift my head up, look around, and every now and then make some eye contact with someone. Seemed innocent enough. However, at 5'11" and 265lbs of muscle, I was perceived as "intimidating" to some people because I was looking at them. Not intentional. They never interacted with me, but a complaint was made, and I was quietly asked by the manager to not come back to that gym anymore, and my membership cancelled. Lesson there: Don't look at people while at the gym.
2. At work at the hospital. We have a big hospital with long hallways. I would see someone I was acquainted with walking towards me, well, I made the mistake of looking at them as they approached, and just as they passed me they would eye avert and "ghost" me. I could never figure out that behavior, because EVERYONE did it. What the heck was going on? These were the same people that I could have a cordial conversation with in any other circumstance. Come to find out decades later that there IS a way that is socially acceptable. Evidently, by looking at this other person as they approach, they will subconsciously sense this as "threatening behavior" and will not make eye contact with you. The proper way to approach is to not look at them directly and make eye contact until you are say, 10-20 feet away, then quickly look up, make eye contact, greet them, and then move on. The entire interaction taking only 1-2 seconds. After I learned this technique, no more issues.
3. I am an educator at a university and within the hospital. I am a mentor. So, working with students, with new employees, young physicians in training, I do spend a fair amount of my day talking to people. I have this subconscious habit of eye aversion while I am discussing topics. I will make eye contact with them initially, but once I get into "monologue mode" my eyes drift away into space. Sometimes I catch myself, sometimes I don't. I know for a fact, I keep people's attention and interaction much better if I am looking into the eyes of my students, quickly making my eyes connect with every individual in the room. However, this is a very conscious effort. It does not come naturally and as such, is not a consistent behavior with me.
I have since learned that there are many reasons why someone might eye avert, so it may not have anything to do with an underlying autism condition. In my situation, it was not understanding the social rules of how much is too much or too little, and in what circumstances. Things that "neurotypical" children seemingly pick up instinctually on their own, some of us simply never do. In my case, I was totally oblivious, and it wasn't until I was in my 50's that I learned about these things.