I would immediately disbelieve what nerdy people say about social situations especially alcohol most people use proxy plausible excuses to hide social fear. Considering I have actually met a large quantity of people who participate in this sort of stuff I would favor my conclusion to a large degree and override any soft discussion on “bitterness” or “taste”.
However if this isn’t the case then carry on. I predict that a lot of people will just argue with me for no reason about this even though I am correct for probably the majority of participants in this discussion. If you are one of those people you need to break out of your shell, passivity is harmful for personality development.
antisocial people have little experience in social situations and their experience cannot be relied upon
in my experience, not liking alcohol is a bad excuse to not be social
there are many benefits to being social and getting out more, and I would encourage everyone to do it
............................
the first one sounds rude and unhelpful, the second one is more helpful.
My hypothesis was:
“people taste differently and therefore liking and disliking alcohol is:
less of a big deal around people who understand this
subject to complex human experience”
I was looking for other people’s experience on the matter because I have come to terms with my not-drinking in social situations and stumbled upon a reasonable explanation and others might find that helpful to have.
generally—things tasting bad is a very good reason to not taste them as often as things that taste good. (subject to health reasons)
I am a super-social person and alcohol does not get in my way, what gets in my way more is deciding how to buy a round of drinks for people correctly in a social situation when I am not drinking. (I often drive which does not help)
I would immediately disbelieve what nerdy people say about social situations especially alcohol most people use proxy plausible excuses to hide social fear. Considering I have actually met a large quantity of people who participate in this sort of stuff I would favor my conclusion to a large degree and override any soft discussion on “bitterness” or “taste”.
However if this isn’t the case then carry on. I predict that a lot of people will just argue with me for no reason about this even though I am correct for probably the majority of participants in this discussion. If you are one of those people you need to break out of your shell, passivity is harmful for personality development.
my interpretation of your post seems to go:
you are wrong
you have social fear and thats your problem
I have more experience therefore you are wrong
even if you say I am wrong you are wrong
everyone is wrong and needs to get out more
............................
now I assume what you meant to say was:
antisocial people have little experience in social situations and their experience cannot be relied upon
in my experience, not liking alcohol is a bad excuse to not be social
there are many benefits to being social and getting out more, and I would encourage everyone to do it
............................
the first one sounds rude and unhelpful, the second one is more helpful.
My hypothesis was: “people taste differently and therefore liking and disliking alcohol is:
less of a big deal around people who understand this
subject to complex human experience”
I was looking for other people’s experience on the matter because I have come to terms with my not-drinking in social situations and stumbled upon a reasonable explanation and others might find that helpful to have.
generally—things tasting bad is a very good reason to not taste them as often as things that taste good. (subject to health reasons)
I am a super-social person and alcohol does not get in my way, what gets in my way more is deciding how to buy a round of drinks for people correctly in a social situation when I am not drinking. (I often drive which does not help)
(Sorry: edits for formatting)