How Social Interaction Actually Works

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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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
W
 
Its kinda like dance,what matter is the rhytm not percect choreography.
 
This deserves and award, very detailed guide for people who never got to learn social stuff.
 
This deserves and award, very detailed guide for people who never got to learn social stuff.
Now people need to practice.NT is a fluid thing.You can master it
 
Now people need to practice.NT is a fluid thing.You can master it
I'm extremely NT when I'm drunk but when I'm not on any drug I'm not particularly awkward but I struggle to hold a convo with new people I just met. I don't have a problem with holding convos with people I know though.
 
I'm extremely NT when I'm drunk but when I'm not on any drug I'm not particularly awkward but I struggle to hold a convo with new people I just met. I don't have a problem with holding convos with people I know though.
yes,but alcohol is poison and looksminer
 
yes,but alcohol is poison and looksminer
I know It's not good for you at all and has no benefits. But I only drink to gain enough confidence to talk to htbs and It's the only drug that works to pull girls for me. I just don't got the confidence to approach good looking girls sober atm. I'm tryna work on that though.
 
I know It's not good for you at all and has no benefits. But I only drink to gain enough confidence to talk to htbs and It's the only drug that works to pull girls for me. I just don't got the confidence to approach good looking girls sober atm. I'm tryna work on that though.
After some years you gonna do stomach usg and find some not cool things.But i dont really know much after years of drink.I also drink to slay but stop it and stop approaching at 44 lays(90% on alcohol).I approach and clubbing two years.Maybe if someone is subhuman is good as he dont have much to loose.RN my goal is debloat to 9% show them bones.Maybe then i can get away with no game.

But dont feel like im try to scare you.Maybe im to autistic and thats why i scared of alcohol.
 
Last edited:
After some years you gonna do stomach usg and find some not cool things.But i dont really know much after years of drink.I also drink to slay but stop it and stop approaching at 44 lays(90% on alcohol).I approach and clubbing two years.Maybe if someone is subhuman is good as he dont have much to loose.RN my goal is debloat to 9% show them bones.Maybe then i can get away with no game.

But dont feel like im try to scare you.Maybe im to autistic and thats why i scared of alcohol.
I've always been skinny as a kid. So I was pretty much already at a good body fat % when I started looksmaxing. I've focused on many other things.
I don't think autism has anything to do with being scared of alc tbh.
I would recommend to atleast get drunk atleast 1 time. After being drunk for that first time you keep some of the social skills even after when you're sober. It's like you brain finds a new way to act in social situations.
Like after I got drunk for the first time I'm more social than I used too.
 
Another good thing to keep in mind when keeping momentum is that a lot of you need to talk less. I used to talk way too much and try to impress the person I was talking to, whether that was through being witty, making an astute observation, etc. This comes, at least in my case, from a feeling of inadequacy, like I need to "prove" that I'm worth talking to. A person might say they had a soccer game last week, so you say "Oh, do you practice a lot?" And then they simply reply "Yeah".

If you're insecure, you'll likely have the instinct to try and kill the silence because you feel like he's uninterested in you. So you start trying to make yourself interesting by asking a bunch of follow up questions or sharing your own sport or whatever, which gets annoying quickly. So instead, just chill, the ball is in his court. If he wants to reply, he will eventually, maybe he'll say 5 seconds later "I play for this team, you've heard of them?". And if he doesn't, he won't, so just let him go.
Aspies are social retards and they need to going with flow,dance and be fluid
 
  • +1
Reactions: o_Owtf
I've always been skinny as a kid. So I was pretty much already at a good body fat % when I started looksmaxing. I've focused on many other things.
I don't think autism has anything to do with being scared of alc tbh.
I would recommend to atleast get drunk atleast 1 time. After being drunk for that first time you keep some of the social skills even after when you're sober. It's like you brain finds a new way to act in social situations.
Like after I got drunk for the first time I'm more social than I used too.
yes i also think if you get drunk it somehow make you to realize you can "dance" but after some time you need more and more drink to be as nt as you be before drink.It kinda like you must go with the flow also with drinking.Its not black or white
 
I've always been skinny as a kid. So I was pretty much already at a good body fat % when I started looksmaxing. I've focused on many other things.
I don't think autism has anything to do with being scared of alc tbh.
I would recommend to atleast get drunk atleast 1 time. After being drunk for that first time you keep some of the social skills even after when you're sober. It's like you brain finds a new way to act in social situations.
Like after I got drunk for the first time I'm more social than I used too.
I drink in the past,after some time of doing it i start to be scared of health side effect even i dont drink much.I drink on weekends like nt normies at time.
 
It’s such water but it’s literally so true, there is no bad conversation starter if people see you as this:

View attachment 4482163


An autist can either spend thousands of hours dedicated perfecting his act, only to be brushed off the same way, and STILL appear uncanny/weird + eventually burn out from faking his entire concept of self

View attachment 4482164

Or just change your “self” directly, to the point where you don’t need to torture yourself into an endless search for the unattainable perfect combination of words and charisma to be accepted by others
Its not black or white.Second thing subhuman never gonna look like super giga chad psl god who can be as aspie as possible and still have his dick suck off by femoids.Life its like dance,you must going with flow and rhythm.

Being good in charisma its literally just being good at going with flow.When you get with flow the words just flow with flow.
 
I'm extremely NT when I'm drunk but when I'm not on any drug I'm not particularly awkward but I struggle to hold a convo with new people I just met. I don't have a problem with holding convos with people I know though.
Tell me most crazy story you done on alcohol brah
 
Tell me most crazy story you done on alcohol brah
First time getting drunk is the time I lost my virginity to a mtb. Before that day I had never been close with a girl before and because I was drunk I had so much confidence I walked up to her and we started talking for awhile. Later me and my friend and he walked to my friends house and it was pretty obv she wanted to crack by the way she was talking and looking at me so I took the chance. The crazy part is that I don't even remember the girls name and I can't find her, so I basically lost my virginity to some random mtb that I most likely will never meet again.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Polish_Looksmaxer
First time getting drunk is the time I lost my virginity to a mtb. Before that day I had never been close with a girl before and because I was drunk I had so much confidence I walked up to her and we started talking for awhile. Later me and my friend and he walked to my friends house and it was pretty obv she wanted to crack by the way she was talking and looking at me so I took the chance. The crazy part is that I don't even remember the girls name and I can't find her, so I basically lost my virginity to some random mtb that I most likely will never meet again.
Mirin,how old are you?
 
16 bout to turn 17 in 2 months
Damn bro youre so young.I lost my V card do to online dating when i was 20.First time doing good photoshoot to online dating.The photographer was 26 y o asperger chadlite i met on polish ".org like" chan when we speak about bp.He add some volume to my jaw and shi,on the photos.I get few slays from online using inhenced photos after all.So when i lost my v card it was with 19 y o foid.I buy condoms and vodka when we met to drink everything before i start pumping her.The most crazy storys happen in clubs(wait till you start if you dont already).
 
Is there stage 4? Is that just actually being friends with them. How do you get there from stage 3?
 
Last edited:
Don’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
And no one wanna talk to from normie to above avarage looking aspie.World dont work "youre chad or homeless subhuman with stinky radioactive dick and hiv" and there no one in beetween.
 
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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
Bro deadass i thought everyone excluded me for being a chud I just didn’t fucking talk and probably loook weird
 
And no one wanna talk to from normie to above avarage looking aspie.World dont work "youre chad or homeless subhuman with stinky radioactive dick and hiv" and there no one in beetween.
Can someone translate this gibberish?
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: pfl and ltnbrownacnecel
Can someone translate this gibberish?
The text is a rant expressing frustration about social and dating dynamics. Cleaned up, it means:
“No one wants to talk to me from average (‘normie’) to above average looking people. The world feels like it only works in extremes: either you’re a ‘Chad’ (very attractive and successful) or you’re treated like a worthless outcast. There’s no middle ground.” It’s exaggerated, self-deprecating, and reflects a black-and-white mindset about social status and attraction.

Also you haven’t made a single contribution to this forum since 2018, all your posts are less than 7 words or a reply posting the above profile’s AVI in an intention to mock him. But hey keep doing you :feelskek:
 
  • JFL
Reactions: RichardSpencel
1774688395027
 
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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
Mirn
 
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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 common sense
 
December 30, 2025-
"In b4 BOTB -Genio"

Investment paid off :feelskek::love::love::love::love::love::love::love::love:
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jesus_ist_König
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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
Only losers need to read this shit, im one of them:lul:
 
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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
amazing thread ill listen to this
 
Tales jfl. If it doesn't happen naturally you're fucked and forcing it almost never works.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Surrender
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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
Useful for a nd like me:love:
 
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:

  • don’t smile
  • don’t initiate
  • Give stone faced dead energy
  • Sit there like a NPC waiting for “signals”
You get nothing.

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:
  1. Shown interest
  2. Response
  3. Expansion
You toss something → they catch it and toss back → you catch and toss again.
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:
  • “How’d that happen?”
  • “What was that like?”
  • “Why’d you pick that?”
If they answer with more than one sentence, you’re doing it right.
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:
  1. Repeat a small part of what they said
  2. Add a light opinion or question
This signals emotional presence.

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:
  • a related thought
  • a short personal angle
  • a light reaction
Then pass the ball back


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
  • light teasing
  • hypotheticals
  • “us vs the world” framing
Stage 3 is where actual bonding happens. Stay surface level forever and you’re just another forgettable background character.


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 actually worked, this was so simple that when I did it, boom. Made 3 friendships in a day, and in the next day 2 more. This actually proves that you don't only need to look good, you need to enhance your social skills.
 

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