When someone is boring me, at a party or in line in the post office, I ask questions.
Now to be fair, I almost always ask questions. Questions are wonderful, provided that there are answers or at least good conversation to be had. Questions are one of the big reasons I do what I do.
It occurred to me recently, though, that that might be novel, at least for some.
That the best way to improve upon a conversation that isn’t much interesting you is to ask questions. That’s how you can direct that conversation and make it into something more than what it would be otherwise.
If you’re talking to a guy who sells fences, you might be bored. But if you talk to him about how different kinds of fence are made, distributed and costs kept low, it could get interesting. Without enough detail, anything can become interesting.
Like spaghetti sauce, as author Malcolm Gladwell showed with a great TED talk back in 2004.
Note sure I understand this phrase:
“Without enough detail, anything can become interesting.”
So… too much detail is boring, right? Talk to any Asperger’s kid and you’ll have intimate understanding of this concept. Or, do you mean, ask questions so you can become more interested in the details that are evoked from asking the questions?
Nah, I mean if something is boring, usually MORE detail makes the topic MORE interesting. No?
-cgw
From @christopherwink If a topic is boring, then go into more detail: like with spaghetti sauce http://tinyurl.com/472rjaf