I was reading a blog by my friend Ciara Ballintyne about
a misunderstanding she had with someone on Twitter that left her a bit stumped.
Read her blog about it here.
I had a similar incident when I had only been on Twitter
a few months. A young man followed me. He let me know that he had bought my book. I thanked him for doing that. After he read it, he said he loved it and was going to leave a review on
Amazon that weekend. Of course I immediately thanked him for taking the time to
read it and to let me know on Twitter how much he enjoyed it. The weekend came
and went with no word from him. Now, I'm a busy person and it's no secret that
I hate writing reviews, so I am the last person to push someone for a review.
He didn't have anything published, so I had already joined his
blog and made some polite comments on his posts, but he did not respond to me
on the blog or on Twitter. When he tweeted that he landed a publishing deal. I
congratulated him, but again, no response. I finally sent him a direct message
telling him that I would like to return the favor and buy his book. I asked if he had a
publication date. Nothing. Nada. No response at all. So I wished him the best
and moved on.
But honestly, it
bugged me. Why would it bother me that I may have offended someone I don't
really know? The problem is...I didn't do anything wrong. Not that I know of
anyway. I went back and looked at my tweets to him and my comments on his blog,
and I couldn't find anything that looked offensive to me. I didn't get it.
Since he won't respond to me at all, guess I'll never know.
One of the major problems I have had with social media
since I started this adventure last year is the fact that I have to depend
completely on the words people write to try to decipher their meaning. Working
in psychology for as long as I have, I didn't realize how completely dependent
I am on non verbal cues when I communicate. Body language is a HUGE part of
communication, and without it, I feel blind.
I tend to be a little sarcastic (ok, maybe a lot
sarcastic), so I really have to watch how I word things with new people because
sarcasm doesn't always translate well and sometimes comes off just sounding
mean. One would think that 140 characters would limit the amount of trouble you
could get into, but I've pissed people off using a lot less.
The point I want to make is similar to Ciara's. If
someone says something ambiguous on a social media site or in a blog comment
that you don't understand, ask for clarification. Don't be overly sensitive. It's
easy to misunderstand someone's words when there are no body language cues to
let you know what they really mean. Give people a chance to explain themselves.
That being said, don't confuse a misunderstanding with people who are
blatant douchebags. That's why they have "Unfollow,"
"Unfriend" and "Block." Don't be afraid to use them if
someone is obviously being cruel.
Great post! Both of you!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteGreat post and so true. Body language is an essential aspect of communication. Like you, I have a sarcastic bite to my humor. Thank God for the 140 character limit on Twitter or I'd be up shit creek.
ReplyDeleteLOL...sometimes that character limit hasn't saved me! :D
DeleteThanks for expanding on my post! I was surprised and flattered when I realised you'd linked to my post. It's so true, though - something like 80% of communication is body language? You'd know better than me, but anyway, it's a LOT. And people are so quick to jump to conclusions.
ReplyDeleteThere's probably something in that about lack of tolerance.
I was glad to link your post Ciara. I'm actually surprised people don't talk about this more often. I know it is a problem for me not having body language to either understand what someone is saying or to get my own meaning across. I should have known I wouldn't be the only one trying to deal with that.
DeleteI think it is even more important now that we are talking with people all over the world. Not only are we missing body language, but there are cultural and translation issues as well. Something we need to keep in mind :)
I agree with you. It's easy to misread people. When I was in college / high school, I was in a roleplaying site to help with writing and a fun way to kill time. But the drama over misread conversations turned me off of RPing. Which was sad, 'cuz it was great for the muse :)
ReplyDeleteBut I learned since then not to over-read peoples posts. What bugs me is on sites like YouTube where people think it's okay to "troll" or be a jerk to someone. It needs to be realized that there's a human reading your words, not a cold machine.
Anyway, rant over, just saying hi and agreed with you :)
Claire
Maybe he was lying about the whole publishing deal and ashamed to respond, or he was just weird. In Ciara's case, he was just a garden variety jerk.
ReplyDelete