I want to convey all of the context to my yes/no answers first, but people get frustrated because they just want the answer

I was gonna make a different meme about how godly I feel when I can respond to an open-ended question with yes/no but it just didn’t come together and then I thought of this instead

  • It's A Faaaahhkeah!@lemmus.org
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    8 months ago

    So do you want a drink?

    Well to answer that you first have to look back at the preindustrial era of southern France and how the fall of the Mongolian empire effected the growing patterns of the north American maize fields.

      • It's A Faaaahhkeah!@lemmus.org
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        8 months ago

        ok, so before we get to that we need to understand how the fall of the Roman Empire helped in the creation of modern day Scandinavia by using the silk road trade route to launder money through the Prussian army.

        If you look at this map you can clearly see how changes in air pressure along the coast of Brazil caused the an uncontrollable growth of black beans which flooded the market in South East Asia causing the overthrowing of the 3rd King of Scotland to be squashed, but as you already know it was Wilhelm Vertigo who lead the British army through the Saudi desert to meet with a Sharman dog whisperer who told them that “if they follow the river 5.7 miles south and walk inland 6.8 miles, cross the north east mountain they will reach their new home”.

  • JeffreyOrange@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    People like you are so hard to listen to. So often my brain just shuts off if I ask a simple question and get a ton of irrelevent context. Please just summarize your answer at least.

    • bitwaba@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I have to do the “long description before answering yes or no” thing at work because I constantly have to describe to my project managers why I could answer yes or no but ultimately the question it self is pointless and they should really be asking something else.

  • BOMBS@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I dated a girl that turned out to be a narcissistic abuser. I’m not just saying that. A therapist that is an expert on narc abuse relationships told me that after several sessions. Anyway, my ex would absolutely never answer a yes/no question with a yes/no answer. Her strategy was to respond in a way that changed the topic of the conversation to something she could dominate and somehow shift blame or gaslight. It was unbearable. Now, when someone does that, I take a mental note. If they do it again, I decide I don’t want that person involved in my life much at all.

  • TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Do you break the law? Yes or no?

    The answer is almost certainly yes, but it definitely requires context. Are we talking speeding? Murder?

    It’s like on a physical health assessment I have to take yearly that asks if I’m a smoker with the options ofa pack a day or more, a pack a week, I quit smoking, or I have never smoked a cigarette.

    Sometimes (often!) A simple yes or no doesn’t answer the context of the question.

    • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      You can add context and still answer a question.

      The answer to “Do you want breakfast?” can be more than a simple yes or no, but it should not be a 15min monologue about the importance of nutrition and why your political opponent tries to undermine nutritional freedom by increasing taxes.

  • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Ooh I’d share this meme with the people I know who need it most, but I’ve already cleansed those toxic people out of my life.

    I’d also love to see a meme about people who respond to questions with a question. They are nauseatingly manipulative and/or clueless people.

  • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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    8 months ago

    I do this a lot too, and I also experienced people becoming frustrated with me. I didn’t enjoy that, so I now try to do this less. You may not have the same inclination as I do, but I will share something that I found helpful, in case you do.

    The way I thought about it is that when you write an essay, or give a presentation, the structure is usually “Intro: here’s what I’m doing to tell you; Main: I’m telling you the stuff; Conclusion: Here’s what I just told you”. It can feel repetitive, but a good intro primes people for the info they’re about to receive, and a good conclusion puts a cap on things to make it easier to reflect on the whole.

    Conveying the context before giving the yes/no answers makes it harder for people to make sense of the wider whole, because the meaning of statements is context dependent. For example, if the question at hand was "should we go to the shop?’ and I stated “the shop is going to close soon”, the actual meaning of that could be “we should go right now so we make it in time” or “We’re not going to make it in time, we should go tomorrow”. If I haven’t started by reasoning by making it clear whether I’m “yes, let’s go” Vs “no, let’s wait”, then people listening to my reasons have to hold both of these versions in their head, and puzzle out which is the most plausible take by fitting together fragments of interpretations. It can feel like information overload, and I found that people were more able to listen to context and reasonings if I led with a clear “thesis statement”

  • IndiBrony@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Every single journalist: “Were Frank Hester’s comments about Diane Abbott racist?”

    Every single Conservative: Draws 25

  • VeganCheesecake
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    8 months ago

    I have the tendency to do that. My therapist says it comes from the early and messy divorce of my parents.

    I at least try to top it off with - so, to make it short, yes/no.