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How To Talk To Anyone 92 Little Tricks For big Success In Relationship

A book I took from the net; all credit belongs to Leil lowndes

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How to Win Their Affection by Overlooking Their Bloopers

One remarkable reaction opened my eyes to yet another difference between big winners and little losers. Several years ago I was

doing a project for a client. I had the pleasure of being taken to

lunch by the four biggest fish in the firm. They wanted to familiarize me with communications problems their company was

experiencing.

We went to a busy midtown restaurant at peak lunchtime.

Every table was filled with a variety of corporate creatures. Upperand middle-management types were lunching in their suits and

ties or high-collar blouses. Workers and secretaries were munching in their blue shirts or short skirts. The restaurant was buzzing

with conversation and conviviality.

Over the entrée, we were in deep discussion about the company's challenges. The CFO, Mr. Wilson, was talking about the

financial outlook when suddenly, BLAM! Not six feet away, a

waiter dropped a tray full of dishes. Glasses broke, silverware clattered against the marble floor, and a hot baked potato rolled under

our table in a direct path for Wilson's feet.

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How to Win Their

Affection by

Overlooking Their

Bloopers

✰78

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Copyright 2003 by Leil Lowndes. Click Here for Terms of Use.

Practically everyone in the restaurant turned toward the

humiliated waiter. We heard a cacophony of "Uh-oh," "Butterfingers!" "Whoops, watch it!" "Boy, that's his last lunch here,"

and a variety of tittering and derisive laughter.

Wilson, however, didn't miss a word of his monologue. Not

one big player at my table turned or blinked an eye. It was as

though nothing had happened. The restaurant gradually quieted

down around us as we continued our deliberations. (A few minutes later the baked potato shot back out from under our table. At

that moment, I found myself wondering whether Wilson had been

a soccer player in his youth.)

Over coffee, the director of marketing, Ms. Dawson, was discussing the company's planned expansion. Suddenly she made an

expansive gesture with her arms that knocked over her coffee cup.

Just as I was about to say, "Oh dear," I bit my tongue. Before I

could grab my napkin to help, Dawson was dabbing the muddy

puddle with hers, and not missing a syllable of her soliloquy. None

of her cool colleagues at the table even seemed to notice the overturned cup.

At that instant, I realized big boys and big girls see no bloopers, hear no bloopers. They never say "Butterfingers" or "Whoops"

or even "Uh-oh." They ignore their colleagues' boners. They simply don't notice their comrades' minor spills, slips, fumbles, and

blunders. Thus, the technique "See No Bloopers, Hear No Bloopers" was born.

Let Me Suffer in Your Silence

I have one friend who every time I sneeze says, "Oh, are you coming down with a cold?" Every time I miss a step on a curb, it's "Be

careful!" Every time he sees me after a long day's work he asks,

"Are you tired?" Granted, this is small fry in the great bouillabaisse

of bloopers. And the poor guy probably genuinely thinks he's

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being sensitive to my needs. But, darn it, coming down with a

cold, missing the curb, and looking tired are less than cool. Let

me suffer—in YOUR silence.

If you're having dinner with a friend and she makes a boner,

be blind to her overturned glass. Be deaf to her sneeze, cough,

or hiccups. No matter how well-meaning your "gesundheit,"

"whoops," or knowing smile, nobody likes to be reminded of their

own human frailty.

"Fine," you say, "for small slips, but what should one do in

extreme circumstances?" Say a rippling tide of soda is flooding

across the table in your direction and it will be impossible to ignore

by the time it reaches your lap.

If possible, deftly flip your napkin to obstruct the current and

keep talking. Try not to miss a syllable of the sentence you started

before the oncoming tide. At this point, your companion might

mutter incoherent apologies. Adroitly weave a parenthetical "It's

nothing" into your current phrase and continue talking. On such

small sands the castles of big cat camaraderie are built.

298 How to Talk to Anyone

Technique #78

See No Bloopers, Hear No Bloopers

Cool communicators allow their friends, associates,

acquaintances, and loved ones the pleasurable myth of

being above commonplace bloopers and embarrassing

biological functions. They simply don't notice their

comrades' minor spills, slips, fumbles, and faux pas.

They obviously ignore raspberries and all other signs of

human frailty in their fellow mortals. Big winners never

gape at another's gaffes.

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If people hate to be reminded of the moments when they're

not shining, there is another event almost as disillusioning. It is

when a talker is shining and the spotlight abruptly pivots to a more

urgent matter. The speaker is forgotten in the flurry.

Top communicators put the glow back in the gloomy gabber's

eyes with the technique that follows.