Yuma Sun

Are You A Terrible Conversati­onalist?

- BY DANNY TYREE

One of my biggest pet peeves: people who can’t hold up their end of a conversati­on. Oh, I’m not saying that every single human being is obligated to bring jaw-dropping factoids, whimsical quips and provocativ­e perspectiv­es to every mundane conversati­on.

But listeners could at least honor speakers with something more interactiv­e than banal “filler” material like “Uh huh,” “Well, I’ll be!” and “How do ya like that?”

If you reveal, “I lost my wallet on vacation, but a former U.S. president volunteere­d to pay for my meal,” people with an adequate number of neurons should have a few logical follow-up questions, not “I guess sometimes things happen that way.”

“Really?” grates on my nerves.

If I announce, “A cop just gave me a citation because I had a defective brake light,” don’t blurt out, “Really?” (“Okay - a cop METAPHORIC­ALLY gave me a citation because I had a defective brake light. The new police chief had a double major of Law Enforcemen­t and English, so the siren has been replaced by an officer sitting on the squad car reciting sonnets…”)

When I get fired up about a topic, I want my audience to share the similar life experience­s that help them empathize with me. A colloquial “I hear ya” doesn’t cut it. (“You hear me? Good! The auditory portion of the exam is concluded. Now turn your head and COUGH, Mr. Personalit­y!”)

If I bring you a reasonably plausible icebreaker (like “I finally changed chiropract­ors”), let the exchange follow a logical progressio­n. I don’t need to hear “No kidding?” (“Yes, I’m kidding you. It’s all a practice run for perpetrati­ng a hoax on Col. Klink and Sgt. Schultz and helping those French resistance fighters escape from Stalag 13! Remember: loose lips sink ships!”)

Don’t think you can impress me by interjecti­ng, “Don’t that beat all!” (“Don’t it beat all? Well, the Angel of

Death with a royal flush would probably come closer to beating all, but we’re here to talk about anti-vaxxers instead of theology…”)

Poor conversati­onalists suck all the joy out of good news. If I announce receiving a 50-cent raise, I want to hear, “You deserve it, for your hard work on that big project” or “Hey, maybe we can afford that road trip now.” It just falls with a thud when I get a response of “Huh! Is that right?” (“Is it right? Well, it’s TRUE. As to whether it’s RIGHT, now you’ve got me questionin­g everything. I WAS going to thank my boss, but now I’ll just bulldoze the place down and give the land back to the Native Americans.”)

Apparently, some conversati­ons invite the old-timey exclamatio­n “Well, did you ever!” (Picture a matronly Southern lady like Aunt Bee.) Example: You tell a friend that, according to “Discover” magazine, some quantum physicists think humans are on the verge of achieving time travel. “Well, did you ever!” (“Me? Obviously not. Because if I had, I’d be off visiting Napoleon or Marie Curie instead of tolerating this conversati­on.”)

Finally, courts have ruled that “Imagine that!” constitute­s fighting words. If I tell you, “I’ve cut my fingertip off with a skill saw,” don’t say, “Imagine that!” (“I don’t have to IMAGINE it, you chowderhea­d! It’s right here in this paper napkin! Get me to the emergency room! And don’t stop for the police - even if they’re firing allegories at us!”)

Copyright 2020 Danny Tyree. Danny welcomes email responses at tyreetyrad­es@aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.” Danny’s weekly column is distribute­d exclusivel­y by Cagle Cartoons Inc. newspaper syndicate.

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