1/365

On the train on the way to the gym for my swim les­son tonight, I noticed that I was seat­ed across from a young woman who was work­ing in her sketch­book. She was atten­tive to her work and did a good job of trans­lat­ing what her eye saw to what her pen­cil drew out.

She had some dif­fi­cul­ty with the fore­short­en­ing of the out­line of the eyes of her sub­jects, espe­cial­ly from the side. And no won­der: that’s a very tricky set of trans­for­ma­tions in three dimen­sions to be mapped out in lines in two dimen­sions. So with­out lec­tur­ing (I pref­aced my com­ments by say­ing that I was only remind­ing her of some­thing she obvi­ous­ly knew intel­lec­tu­al­ly but was hav­ing some dif­fi­cul­ty prac­tis­ing) I made a sug­ges­tion about how to think about the shape of the eye. She showed me a few pages in her sketch­book that I had­n’t seen from shoul­der-surf­ing, and then my stop came. I smiled and said good-bye, and went on to the gym.

What I learned: just like tak­ing out the trash, talk­ing to a pret­ty woman involves about 20 min­utes of obsess­ing in prepa­ra­tion for 2 min­utes of actu­al activ­i­ty. And while I don’t regret hav­ing the con­ver­sa­tion, I’m remind­ed that yes, it is bet­ter to regret some­thing you have done than some­thing you haven’t done. Isn’t it?

So that’s it for today. I get to do this again tomor­row, but I don’t have to wor­ry about it until then.

3 Replies to “1/365

  1. I think your goal should be
    I think your goal should be to reduce the laten­cy between visu­al acqui­si­tion and first sen­tence down from 20 min­utes to about 15 – 30 sec­onds. If you need to think longer than that about what you want to say, beyond “Hel­lo”, then you prob­a­bly have noth­ing of val­ue to say, and should sim­ply leave it at “Hel­lo” and wait for the oth­er per­son to ini­ti­ate the next salvo.

    Here’s a trick that I swear by- when you are about to talk to a pret­ty girl, quick­ly remind your­self that her first inter­nal reac­tion to your com­ment will not be “I am a pret­ty girl”. The real­i­ty is, she’s going to be far more focused on what you said, that who she is at that moment. Going back to my first com­ment, if you’ve said some­thing that evokes a response from her, you’re over the hump, and the con­ver­sa­tion should be off to a nat­ur­al arc of some dura­tion. Girls want to be spo­ken to, and the girls you want to speak to don’t want to be objec­ti­fied before that con­ver­sa­tion starts.

    This is actu­al­ly akin to the Meis­ner tech­nique of act­ing, which basi­cal­ly says that, if you pinch some­one, they say “ouch” instinc­tive­ly. Tak­en fur­ther, what­ev­er you say, and the tone with which you speak should evoke an instinc­tive response from the oth­er per­son in the con­ver­sa­tion, and by sim­ply lis­ten­ing to the oth­er per­son, you facil­i­tate that response. This is dif­fi­cult to accom­plish if you are stuck in your own thoughts.

  2. Good points, all duly
    Good points, all duly noted.

    In my own defense, I exag­ger­at­ed about the “20 min­utes” part. It was more like five or sev­en min­utes, and I was lis­ten­ing to music and read­ing a book when the crowd on the train thinned out enough that I could see that there was some­one sit­ting across the aisle from me. So it was­n’t exact­ly like tak­ing the garbage out. I saw her work­ing in her sketch­book, went back to my book, glanced over, looked and found the per­son she was sketch­ing, went back to my book, looked over and noticed the fore­short­en­ing issue, went back to read­ing my book, etc.

  3. Right on.
    One of my favorite

    Right on.

    One of my favorite places to strike up a con­ver­sa­tion is in line. Check-out lines, bank lines, movie lines. This is all wast­ed time we might as well spend get­ting to know our neighbors.

    Some­times I wait for some­thing to hap­pen that we can both observe and com­ment on, some­times I announce some­thing odd or triv­ial and see who bites the line, and some­times I make obser­va­tions about total strangers to their face. Noth­ing crit­i­cal, usu­al­ly. Just prob­ing. It’s fun. Since we’re all stuck on this rock togeth­er, we might as well dis­cuss the situation.

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