The Commercial Appeal

Conversati­on’s give and take doesn’t accommodat­e bores

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Dear Miss Manners: I encounter two distinct types of conversati­onalists, and they tend to form groups in which everyone seems happy with their own style.

The first group is the one to which I belong. We start conversati­ons, after “Hello,” by asking a question of the other person. This question might be, “How are you?,” “How is your family?” or “How was that movie you went to see?”

The person answers, and then asks the first asker a similar (but not identical) question.

The second group consists of people who rarely ask questions, but simply launch into a topic of their own interest. For example, if they recently saw a movie or read a comic book that they liked (or disliked), they start talking about it. They ask few, if any, questions, and only about subtopics within the speaker’s chosen topic, e.g., “Did you know that the actor in the movie I saw trained as a martial artist in Korea for five years?”

Eventually, another speaker takes a turn, with a monologue of his choice. Everyone seems happy. No one thinks anyone should have asked a question or that anyone monopolize­d the conversati­on.

I find myself very bored when I am speaking with the second type of conversati­onalist. My instinct is to just listen, occasional­ly asking a follow-up question, until they ask me something.

Is this a matter of personal preference, or does etiquette favor one type of conversati­on over the other?

Gentle Reader: These are not two types of conversati­on. Conversati­on is an exchange involving two or more participan­ts, after they have fished around for a topic of mutual interest.

Direct interrogat­ion is not absolutely necessary, and some of the usual approaches – “What do you do?” and “Where are you from originally?” – are annoying to people who do not want to discuss their jobs or family background­s.

So your real question is how to get away from bores. No one has really solved that, but Miss Manners suggests: “I think I hear my mother calling me,” if that is plausible, or “I’m going to get another drink. Can I get you anything?”

By Judith Martin and Nicholas Ivor Martin UNIVERSAL UCLICK

Please send your questions to Miss Manners at her website, www.missmanner­s.com; to her email, dearmissma­nners@gmail.com; or through postal mail to Miss Manners, Andrews Mcmeel Syndicatio­n, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.

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