My captive audience |
So I talk to myself. Always have done. I will also chat to inanimate objects. I’m not fussy like that. The other morning, I had a fascinating conversation
with the coffee machine. Before coffee
and everything.
I have little or no memory of what I actually
said to it but I do recall in my mind, it held onto every word. What’s more there were no interruptions and once
I think I saw it nod ever so slightly.
Then Smallest Boy stuck his head
around the door and asked was I talking to myself again.
Nabbed.
It has just occurred to me that maybe
the reason my boys never answer me is because they just assume I am deep in conversation
with myself and not them.
When you talk to yourself or to
inanimate objects or the presenters on the radio, you have a captive
audience. It’s very pleasing. They are going nowhere. They are also less likely to laugh at you and
inform you in an unkind or scathing way that you are talking shite.
But there are other reasons why people
talk to themselves. They go as follows.
You might be lonely.
Self-esteem may be low or there is some
kind of disorder present. (Thanks, Google)
You are a genius (thanks, Google)
Talking to yourself helps your brain work
more efficiently by helping you focus on the job at hand.
It can help you achieve your goals. By sounding out each step, things seem more concise
and approachable thus making everything seem more doable.
It enables you to syphon off stress.
Memory can be stimulated.
We all need a pep talk every now and
again so talking ourselves through something can be encouraging.
Your attention span and concentration
can be improved.
And the most interesting one of all is
that everyone does it with kids being the most common offenders but as they
grow up they tend to stop. Popular belief
is that small children are encouraged not to talk to themselves and are
therefore trained out of it.
So the next time you see a little kid talking
to their stuffed toys or pushing around a truck filled with sand and engaged in
a lively conversation, let them on. They
are playing and learning.
Same goes for the grown woman
conversing with the coffee machine or arguing out loud with the trolley coin
when it refuses to go into the slot.
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