pslgod15
🙏BLESS🙏
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- Jun 28, 2025
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chad en que sentido jfl tu mas bien pareces una foid masNo bro, yo soy chad y no puedo hablar ni con mi familia si no estoy drogado
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chad en que sentido jfl tu mas bien pareces una foid masNo bro, yo soy chad y no puedo hablar ni con mi familia si no estoy drogado
Stacy bueno da lo mismochad en que sentido jfl tu mas bien pareces una foid mas
dnr chatgptYou’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Really good high effort thread thanks for examples and allSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
I needed this , i really didSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
Did you actually try it, or are you just convincing yourself it won’t work for you, so you never even bothered?None of this stuff works for me
holy shit bro thanks so muchSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
Water tho Chad still gets talked toSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
(yeah, that’s you reading this)
nice guide, but not needed if you're htn (+) because atp it doesn't matter what the fuck you say, if you listen or if you show interestSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
why would i want a CONVERSATION in the first place brotha. Tap n dip while drunk is law.Social Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
if u need to look at forums for social interaction advice its already over. the only way to get better at interactions is only through real life experiences. get off the phone and try to be with people as much as possible. worked for meSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
BookmarkedSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
Oh trust me, i’ve bothered.Did you actually try it, or are you just convincing yourself it won’t work for you so you never even bothered?
poison seed water. its over“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
The part I find hardest is when to talk. Like for example sat round a table in English class , everyone talking and I think of something to say but I just don’t know when to get it out and then it becomes to late and the topic kind of shifts to something slightly differentSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
what if u have subhuman smileOLWEYZ SMILE!
smiling is sunnah![]()
just smilewhat if u have subhuman smile
Dont smile, true men dont show emotionswhat if u have subhuman smile
thank you bro, cus someone who can talk or make ppl laugh inevitably controls the room imo. Looks can only do so much when you’re doomscrolling on your phone with no social interactionSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
read this while texting a girlSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
forum so socially awkward that a post explaining how to talk to people made it to botbSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
fuck bro I need a guide just to socially interact somewhat normally... jflSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
thans bhai@blur_el
iz okay showin ur ugly smile is better than lookin sadwhat if u have subhuman smile

absolutely mirin this thread after years of trying different ways of social interaction this is very true and accurateSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
but im lowk js retarded as fuckabsolutely mirin this thread after years of trying different ways of social interaction this is very true and accurate
@HighLtnbut im lowk js retarded as fuck
@ Rubyon an Uber to a club rn, gonna read this and if I don't get laid I want you to delete your account
same lolbut im lowk js retarded as fuck
wrong guy@HighLtn
the basics for not appearing autisticSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
Dnr if you need a thread on how to socialize from looksmax.org in order to be able to make friends it’s genuinely over for youSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas
What if the person you are talking to act like that? One word answer and no interest? I guess is over thereSocial Interaction 101
Most of you are socially dead because you refuse to accept one brutal truth:
People mirror what you output. Zero input = zero output.
If you:
You get nothing.
- don’t smile
- don’t initiate
- Give stone faced dead energy
- Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
No one is coming to save you. No friendly person is going to crack your autistic shell. You are 100% responsible for the empty the social reality you experience every day.
Initiation Is Mandatory
There is no perfect moment. You force the moment into existence.
Don’t wait for a signal.
Create one.
Start by noticing something in the environment and bringing attention to it. That’s literally it. Anything else is coping.
Don’t overthink
Don’t hesitate
Conversations Aren’t About interesting Topics
They’re about momentum.
The topic is literally almost irrelevant.
A boring topic with momentum will flow for hours.
A good topic with zero momentum dies in ten seconds flat.
What keeps a convo alive isn’t the subject, it’s the back and forth energy.
Every good convo goes has three steps:
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
- Shown interest
- Response
- Expansion
That loop is everything and keeps things alive.
Never kill the loop
Never ignore shown interest or give one word responses like a retard.
If you do this it’s over, no matter how interesting the topic was supposed to be. One of the biggest conversation killing mistakes is topic jumping. You think you’re being charismatic and having a smooth conversation, but in reality you just nuked the entire interaction. Never do this shit. You completely skipped Step 3: Expansion.
That’s conversational suicide.
Them: “It’s warm today.”
Retard: “Yeah. So what do you do for work?”
Normal human: “Yeah, feels like summer never ended.”
Most of you autists obsess over what to say when the real problem is you don’t know how to keep the damn ball in the air.
Momentum > content. Always.
Only switch topics when there’s a natural bridge.
Low-Effort, High-Flow Technique: Invite Stories
The easiest way to keep a convo going with less effort is to invite them to talk:
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
- “How’d that happen?”
- “What was that like?”
- “Why’d you pick that?”
It forces them to talk, keeps momentum alive, and you barely have to say shit.
It’s piss easy. The laziest, most foolproof hack that works even for low verbal autists (yeah, that’s you reading this)
Show You’re Listening
Do this:
This signals emotional presence.
- Repeat a small part of what they said
- Add a light opinion or question
Them: "I relocated for work and starting over has been hard bla bla bla"
You: "I get that. I moved cities once and didn’t know a soul, the first month felt unreal.”
Then toss it back:
You: “How long did it take before it felt like home?”
Share, But Don’t Overshare
Never dump your life story.
Share just enough:
Then pass the ball back
- a related thought
- a short personal angle
- a light reaction
Turning These Strangers Into Acquaintances: Soft Escalation
The entire point of talking to strangers isn’t the chat itself, it’s turning them into acquaintances, then friends, then whatever the fuck else you want (network, wingmen, girls, whatever).
Use soft escalation, keep energy rising, slowly shift from surface → personal → playful.
Stage 1: Surface topics
- environment
- situation
- shared inconvenience
Stage 2: Personal topics
- preferences
- feelings
- opinions
Stage 3: Playful
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.
- light teasing
- hypotheticals
- “us vs the world” framing
End on an Up Note
Always leave people slightly better than you found them.
They might not remember you specifically, but if you give them a small hit of positive emotion, they’ll associate you with that good feeling, how you made them feel.
Humans are far more predictable than we like to think. For most people, feelings beat logic every single time. We run on emotion.
Don’t underestimate how much impact something small and simple can have. Even a line like:
You: “Cool talking to you, you actually made this wait less boring.”
can stick more than you’d expect. That’s how impressions last.
Even better is if you end with a low pressure hook:
“We should grab coffee sometime, you seem chill.”
“You know any good spots around here? We could check one out.”
Or just straight: “Give me your number, let’s keep this going.”
If they hesitate, you read the room and back off. No begging.
Every interaction has one goal: plant a seed for the next one. Small talk is just the entry ticket. If you eject after “nice talking bro” and never follow up, you’ve wasted your time and stayed exactly where you started: alone.
You’re not practicing small talk. You’re building a social circle from scratch, one follow up at a time. Turn one acquaintance into a gateway: meet their friends, go to their events, bring them into your circle.
Ignore this all and keep coping that “personality doesn’t matter” while you rot in silence.
@Menas

This is not true personality means alot i am not bad looking i get attention from girls but i have this 5’6 ogre classmate who goes every week out with diffrend girls and when i got more confident i started to hook up with multiple girls a night i was getting max 1 mtb before a nightDon’t it’s absolute how to win friends and influence people tier
The truth is blackpill always wins
No one wants to talk to a ugly,homeless,low status person regardless of what they say or how they say it
When op writes about “feelings” that is just normie cope for halo effect ,
Have you ever been talking to a girl you found soooooo attractive but she wasn’t a savant conversationalist so you didn’t want to fuck her ??? No ,ye it’s the same thing in reverse ,fix your face and your life will change