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- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!torn!watserv2.uwaterloo.ca!mach1!brea9430
- From: brea9430@mach1.wlu.ca (breadner ken u)
- Subject: "Have a Nice Day"
- Message-ID: <C17nEE.EIC@mach1.wlu.ca>
- Organization: Wilfrid Laurier University
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 15:37:25 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- This phrase is one of my biggest pet peeves. But its irritation factor
- (IF) pales into insignificance when compared with the novel North American
- conversation that I have to go through time after time and day after day:
-
- "Hi! How are you?"
- "Fine. And how are you?"
- "Fine"...
-
- Was there ever a time when people actually listened to each other? I
- recall reading about a game show host who lost his job over the following
- exchange:
-
- "And what does your husband do, Mrs. X?"
- "Well...actually, my husband has passed away..."
- "Oh, isn't that nice?!"
-
- Frankly, I am amazed anyone noticed--because nobody ever listens to the
- half-baked conversations that pass for "formalities".
-
- Try this. When someone asks "How are you", or some variation on this,
- answer in an indifferent tone, "Terrible". You'd be surprised how often
- you get a nice, cheery response.
-
- Does this crap happen only in English? Is it cultural--does it happen on
- the other side of the Atlantic? Or is it universal?
- --
- Ken Breadner (brea9430@mach1.wlu.ca) Wilfrid Laurier University
- lunatic (the BREADbox...) Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
- "If you have built your castles in the air, do not despair. That is where
- they belong. Now put the foundations under them." --Thoreau
-