julieannbabe
<font color=blue>I am a <font color=red>summer <fo
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- Mar 31, 2003
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i am worried as i get really chatty and excited when i get to WDW.
how do you find a right balance?
how do you find a right balance?
julieannbabe said:i am worried as i get really chatty and excited when i get to WDW.
how do you find a right balance?
On our WDW trip, I talked to some really nice people -- just things like where we're all from, how long we're staying, how do we like it, etc.Soprano said:Being a Brit, a Londoner no less, I was a bit reserved in my speech. My first trip to the US was an extreme culture shock for me. People saying hello when I went into a shop, asking me how my day was going, good-buy. Good grief! What's with these people?
A few times in lines, people would talk to me. I recall one of my first ones when I was 24 with my brother and a few guys my age started talking and I didn't really reply and may have appeared to be uninterested, but I wasn't. Once in McDonalds a very hot (good looking) woman struck up a conversation with me as my wife was getting napkins. She talked for ages about England and her children. Another time I was in a Universal store and this cute girl started telling me Jason from Friday 13th freaked her out. Just started talking to me! Wife was outside, phew!
I came back to London greeted by airport staff who wouldn't look at you, taxi drivers mumbling and grumbling. Silence from those who served me at the till in a shop. How different.
Every trip to the US changes me a little. I was once quite shy and wouldn't start a conversation with a stranger, but as said, these holidays change me. Now I am happy to strike up conversations with people, or engage at length with those who start with me. I still think I have quite a way to go before I become like the woman in the OPs post, but who knows what I'll be like at 65!
All well & good, but it does bother his introverted parents when people start striking up conversations with him because he doesn't always speak up, which drags us into it. 
Well to make a long story short, we had this new addition to our tour of MGM. We just could'nt be rude but it kinda creeped us out.
Well at lunch time we finally told him we had PS for Lunch and good -bye
It was very sad , because I think he wanted us to invite him to lunch!!
We still talk about it and have a good laugh 

i am worried as i get really chatty and excited when i get to WDW.
Otherwise, if you're female and you've got an english accent you'll definately get my attention. 
Just to add, I seem to be a magnet for the TMI (too much information) people. It's like they can sense that I'm too nice to tell them to go away, but shy enough that I won't interrupt. So, I know what you mean about your encounter.
It freaked me out at first but then when every single person I had contact with did the same thing, I realized they weren't just being nosey--they were trying to involve me and be friendly. I had one friend that I call "Question Girl" because she will just interrogate new people.
And, after 15 years of living there, I'm now the same way.
Being nice CAN pay off. It doesn't mean people like me are weird--we're just interested in other people. I'm happier this way--I learn so much more about co-workers now.
MermaidsMom said:I personally cannot resist talking to people with beautiful British accents! They always seem fun and have something interesting to say about their trip.
And I love listening to all people talk to each other at WDW (except for the people being mean to their kids) and sometimes will offer directions or help to someone who I can tell is lost or confused.
and she loves it. Me, I didn't inherit that gene. I never talk to strangers, not in queues, or in waiting rooms, or planes, or anywhere else. I'm not a complete savage
. I do say hello and good bye, and I can go as far as exchanging pleasantries with someone, but I really don't want to have a conversation with anyone I don't know. It's not that I'm shy -- I do a lot of training and public speaking, and I have normal relationships at work and church, but I just don't care to speak to people I don't know. As to the OP, I'm not sure what could have been done to cut short the questionings, since the usual cues were not effective. I feel for you!!