There
comes a time in everyone’s life when this happens: you're having a
conversation with someone about a topic that you're interested in, and minutes
into it you suddenly are aware that everything coming out of your mouth is
completely and utterly INANE.
Usually,
the realization is triggered by the person you are speaking with – or, rather, to. You have been going on and on expounding on
a topic you are enthusiastic about, and the other person interjects with:
“Really?” Or: “Interesting.” Or, the killer: “I hear you.” All of which is code for: “Please stop
talking, and set me free.”
People
trapped in those conversations mostly are too polite to tell you to shut up or
to turn their back on you and walk away.
So, they suffer in silence and fill any gaps in your monologue with a
variant of the sayings above. Life for
them has come to a grinding halt as they uncomfortably search for escape,
praying that someone rescues them or that the floor would open up and swallow
them whole – it does not matter where that hole may lead. Once you release them and life resumes, they
feel drained, spiritless, and want to go home.
For
you, the captor, the ignorance of the torture you are inflicting only amplifies
your humiliation when the epiphany hits.
You had believed you were discoursing knowledgeably and entertainingly
when, without warning, the metaphorical rug is pulled out from under your feet
and your heart literally stops beating.
Everything you had said before actually was stupid and boring, and now
there is no way to gracefully backtrack without embarrassing yourself more
than you already have. Should you
abruptly change the subject? Mumble
something incoherently as you gulp the drink you hopefully are holding? Pretend your phone is ringing, silently
thanking modern technology for its ability to interrupt everything? Ask the other person’s opinion, dragging out
the experience even longer?
The
best course probably is to cover up the strangled look on your face with a
violent coughing fit, both effectively ending the conversation and going out
with the listener’s sympathy rather than the resentment they were steadily
brewing.