• @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3526 days ago

    I’m incredibly good at you saying your name and me repeating it aloud without committing it to memory. When I was 19yo, I spent a summer hanging out with a group of people without knowing the names of all but two of them. It was painfully embarrassing trying to hide that fact.

      • @pearsaltchocolatebar
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        1426 days ago

        It’s depressing comic week? This is super lighthearted for them, then.

    • @tal@lemmy.today
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      1026 days ago

      Just say “I’m sorry, your name slipped my mind” and ask again.

      Honestly, people really don’t care.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spotlight_effect

      The spotlight effect is the psychological phenomenon by which people tend to believe they are being noticed more than they really are. Being that one is constantly in the center of one’s own world, an accurate evaluation of how much one is noticed by others is uncommon. The reason for the spotlight effect is the innate tendency to forget that although one is the center of one’s own world, one is not the center of everyone else’s. This tendency is especially prominent when one does something atypical.[1]

      Research has empirically shown that such drastic over-estimation of one’s effect on others is widely common. Many professionals in social psychology encourage people to be conscious of the spotlight effect and to allow this phenomenon to moderate the extent to which one believes one is in a social spotlight.[2]

      The spotlight effect is an extension of several psychological phenomena. Among these is the phenomenon known as anchoring and adjustment, which suggests that individuals will use their own internal feelings of anxiety and the accompanying self-representation as an anchor, then insufficiently correct for the fact that others are less privy to those feelings than they are themselves. Consequently, they overestimate the extent to which their anxiety is obvious to onlookers. In fact, Clark and Wells (1995) suggest that socially phobic people enter social situations in a heightened self-focused state, namely, from a raised emotional anchor. This self-focused state makes it difficult for individuals to set aside public and private self-knowledge to focus on the task.[5]

      • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        526 days ago

        Oh, that’s what I do now. I also let people know that I forget names and please don’t take it personally when meeting them. I’ve had a lot of years to gain more wisdom than I had then. It’s trivially easy to be up front. 19yo me, though, didn’t know shit.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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          26 days ago

          I let them know when I meet them that I’m going to forget their names. That helps when I eventually do forget it somewhere between 5 minutes and a week later. If I don’t forget it, then I’ve exceeded their expectations, and they feel special.

  • @TriflingToad@lemmy.world
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    726 days ago

    I literally cannot remember names. You could say it to my face and I would NOT remember it. I know the names of maybe 5 people in 2+ months of working with them (summer job) where their name tags are in plain view

  • M137
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    626 days ago

    I was at your wedding*

    Not sure how being inside someone’s wedding would work, was he hiding inside the bride’s dress the whole time?

    • @pearsaltchocolatebar
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      2426 days ago

      If you’re part of the wedding party, like a groomsman, you’d be considered in the wedding.