This article was co-authored by Rachel Clissold. Rachel Clissold is a Life Coach and Consultant in Sydney, Australia. With over six years of coaching experience and over 17 years of corporate training, Rachel specializes in helping business leaders move through internal roadblocks, gain more freedom and clarity, and optimize their company’s efficiency and productivity. Rachel uses a wide range of techniques including coaching, intuitive guidance, neuro-linguistic programming, and holistic biohacking to help clients overcome fear, break through limitations, and bring their epic visions to life. Rachel is an acclaimed Reiki Master Practitioner, Qualified practitioner in NLP, EFT, Hypnosis & Past Life Regression. She has created events with up to 500 people around Australia, United Kingdom, Bali, and Costa Rica.
There are 7 references cited in this article, which can be found at the bottom of the page.
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Keeping people interested in you and your conversations is necessary for good relationships. However, this can be extremely hard for some to accomplish. Here is a guide on keeping people interested in you.
Steps
Speaking
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1Quit labeling yourself as shy, timid, nervous, antisocial, etc. Labels, just like on objects and items, keep you stuck in that one place until you're taken out. You're not an object, and as long as you're convinced you're antisocial, only you can remove yourself from this negative label.[1]
- Speak more. Introduce yourself to people you see daily but don't talk with often, and you'll see how quickly your amount of relationships grows. You can also do this by presenting more; whether you're answering a simple question or reading an essay in front of a large audience, people will get to meet you and talk with you if you present.
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2Don't be too talkative! Think talking with a person, and not to them. If you're talkative, escaping the curse can seem nearly impossible, but that's a mental barrier. Overcome this by asking people questions about himself or herself more, putting you aside as much as possible. Don't be completely guarded over yourself, but don't talk too much at people.[2]
- Self-assess and find out why you're talkative. If you're filling a void, maybe feeling trapped and alone in home or at school or work, or crave the attention, consult a professional therapist for help overcoming these issues. These are often too deep to penetrate yourself.
Conversation
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1Don't disclose too much information about yourself. If somebody asks you questions, give him or her simplistically vague answers. This makes people want to learn more, perhaps giving them more of a reason to talk to you.
- If somebody asks something personal, such as, "What do you do for your birthday?" answer with something such as, "I'm always with my family and we have a small tradition. Sometimes friends get to come if they're close, otherwise I have a birthday party. We do something different each year." This will leave people wanting to know 1) what the tradition is, 2) why the friends who come to the family celebration get to come, and 3) what happens at the birthday parties. They'll have to talk to you more to find out.
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2Share interesting moments through gossip. Don't gossip about others unless the person(s) give you explicit permission to do so or you only share within a close social person the other is in as well. Tell about yourself and experiences, but still be vague.
- Let's say you're a girl and you met a boy at your friend's party at a roller rink who chatted you up about maybe hanging out. You could say, "I was at a party someplace and met a cute guy. He suggested going somewhere, but I don't know if I'm busy."
- This leaves the people you told it to wanting to know 1) whose party, 2) party where, 3) who the guy was, 4) what he said to you, and 5) why you might be busy. Being vague can't be stressed enough.
- Let's say you're a girl and you met a boy at your friend's party at a roller rink who chatted you up about maybe hanging out. You could say, "I was at a party someplace and met a cute guy. He suggested going somewhere, but I don't know if I'm busy."
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3Don't say "uh" or "um" too much - save that for text talk! Saying these small words mean the difference from being seen as confident and casual to nervous and an over-thinker. Unless somebody gives a particularly hard question, limit the usage of the conversation-breakers. You want to be quick while still understood.[3]
Social Away from School or Work
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1Have social networking. Get a Facebook and a Kik at least, and a phone number, Twitter, Snapchat, or Instagram if you feel necessary. Ask for peoples' mobile contact information once you deem it appropriate. They might not have a lot of it (especially if you're in school), so ask in parts combining multiple social networks.
- An example of a double multimedia conversation would be, "We should chat more! Do you have a phone number or Kik?" If the answer was to be no, continue with, "Maybe a snapchat or Facebook?" By now, if they haven't had any, they should tell you that they either 1) don't have any social network accounts, or 2) have a different social network account and will proceed to give it to you.
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2Go places. If you're in school, invite friends to come over to your house to do homework and hang. In most social settings, you can invite people to go to a diner, a park, a coffee shop, mall, skate park, movie, etc. Conversations have an odd spark when in a setting other than the usual. If you see the chance, take it.
Personality
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1Be unique! If you're into art, make art for others and show it off. If you play an instrument, join the orchestra, band, or form your own musical group. Take your unique talents and show the world what you can do with them![4]
- Kids have a powerful imagination. But as they grow old, it is replaced by the logical mind.
- You should bridge the gap between imagination and logic.
- So keep playing and be curious. Do not allow the outside world to reduce your passion, enthusiasm, and excitement for play.[5]
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2Be funny. People are naturally attracted to those who are funny, and this is the #1 way to make "unspoken friends" - where you're obviously friends, but it just happened one day with no real conversation needed. Join in or add on to jokes, crack one when appropriate, and laugh things off.[6]
- Make sure you can take things seriously. Laughing or being funny too much can ruin relationships and bring your social status down a few rungs on the ladder. If somebody is going through a hard time, it may be okay to tell a joke to cheer him or her up, but not a joke about the situation.
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3Have your own style. Like an Indie artist, nobody has heard of? Go ahead and listen to it with some friends, and enjoy it yourself. Obsessed with a certain snack or drink? Let others try! Wear bright colors while the rest of your environment is a bit more monotone? Heck, if it looks good, why wouldn't you?[7]
- Don't constant flaunt these different features. There's a huge difference between sharing your interests and forcing something down others' throats. Like what you like, but don't show them around like they're any more important than the mainstream.
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4Share stories. Once again, be vague in them, but go on and share them. Something funny at a birthday party, a strange experience on New Year's, dealing with an ex on Valentine's Day, or perhaps an odd gift for the holidays can all be shared.
Community Q&A
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QuestionMy guy friend wants me to keep him company without getting him bored. How can I do that?Community AnswerYou are not your friend's servant or entertainment. A real friend would like you for who you are, and would not be bored by who you are. If he doesn't enjoy your company, he (and you) should find someone else to hang out with.
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QuestionI think my friends are losing interest in me, they used to call me, hang around with me before, but I don't know whats happened now. Can somebody help me please?Community AnswerAsk them if someone told them something about you. Ditch them for better ones if they still do that.
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QuestionWhat should I do to make someone my best friend?Community AnswerJust try to talk to them and hang out with them as much as possible (without being intrusive or annoying). The more time you spend with someone, they closer you are likely to get. Ask them questions about themselves, maybe tell them a secret or something you've never told anyone before. If they feel like you trust them, they will be more likely to trust you.
Warnings
- Never lie to get attention! It'll always come back to bite you in the rear.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Don't sound snotty or self-absorbed when you tell people you're busy or are doing something. You're no more important than anyone else!⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Don't get caught not being busy when you said you were. If you said you couldn't come to a party and the host catches you at the convenience store right before, it could spread around the school and make people lose their trust in you.⧼thumbs_response⧽
References
- ↑ https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-adaptive-mind/201810/how-stop-bullying-yourself-get-rid-labels
- ↑ https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-do-life/201501/what-if-you-talk-too-much
- ↑ https://hbr.org/2018/08/how-to-stop-saying-um-ah-and-you-know
- ↑ https://www.aconsciousrethink.com/10341/10-things-that-make-a-person-unique/
- ↑ https://thegeniusofplay.org/genius/expert-advice/articles/10-ways-adults-can-be-more-playful.aspx#.YqaHU2BBzIU
- ↑ https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-s-so-funny/201411/eight-steps-becoming-funnier-person
- ↑ https://psychcentral.com/blog/6-rules-for-developing-an-authentic-sense-of-style/