Recently, I came across another amusing post online…
“What you do during small talk…
1)
Nod and smile
2)
Plot your escape”
It brought the infernal reality of this chit-chat to my mind.
I hate small talk. I find it awkward, artificial, and uncomfortable.
And, as an abuse survivor, it can throw me into survival mode
and tactics that support that survival mode. Often, as I have been engaged in
talking about the weather with someone, I can slowly, but surely, feel myself
disassociating, leaving my body, traveling to the nearest amusement park, to
situate myself in one of those water rides. Why do I do this?
A few of my “abused person” theories…
I view small talk as blissful ignorance of the more important
issues.
It’s triggering to me, because of the original dysfunctional
systems that damaged me. The systems were notorious for basking in their
ignorance, to the detriment of the horrific abuse that was allowed to thrive
and persist.
Now add small talk. Call it misinformation, denial,
maladaptive coping, whatever, small talk still didn’t address the destructive
reality that was not being noticed, corrected, stopped, or healed. In fact, it
often re-created and mimicked the abuse I survived. Small talk is easier to
deal with than heavy life subject matter is. Chatting about the weather or the
lovely event we’re attending places no pressure on fixing anything that
could make things riskier, more uncomfortable, and more painful for the status
quo. “Isn’t it a sunny day?” is preferred to “Do you need help?”
But let’s get real. The “help” question is often what’s more
relevant to us than the weather report. How many of us have been hurting, in
agony, wanting someone to ask if we needed help? How many times did someone
only respond with something we didn’t need or want, like discussing banal,
trivial things which made us feel there was something wrong about us for not
wanting to chit-chat about inane topics?
I view small talk as the strategic way to dismiss something
more egregious and toxic.
As I was dealing with a past unhealthy relationship, the
person I was involved with repeatedly stated, “Change the subject” whenever
there was an uncomfortable topic or a confrontational moment. Things needed to
be addressed, and this person absolutely refused to do just that.
Many times, this individual, as away a deflecting, would start chit-chatting
about the latest pop culture scandal or a stranger’s haircut that they admired.
That set the template for my visceral reaction regarding the more important
things in life. Not every person intends on creating these unpleasant and
uncomfortable flashbacks. Sometimes, yes, it is just about the weather.
As an abuse survivor, however, such small talk encounters
seem to be reminiscent of the dismissive attitude towards something/someone
that was hurting or violating me. I do my best with the small talk. But I frequently
tense up as I am reminded of years of negatived pain that only worsened. It,
therefore, is difficult for me to remark about how it’s cooler today than it
was yesterday or someone’s cute chin-length bob.
I view small talk as a sneaky way to make the person wrong.
(Enhanced by peer pressure).
Minimizing.
Ganging up.
Gaslighting.
Yeah, that’s what I often feel I experience with small talk
situations.
And
I can almost hear, usually in a sickly- sweet voice, the argument, “You’re
being too sensitive.”
And then the rest of the village usually comes to pile on.
The town consensus? Why can’t you just make small talk?
Answer? Because I often feel like this is just a creative way
to make me the bad guy, the “too serious” person who just can’t “lighten up.”
Yeah, I can’t lighten up because I feel judged by the person with
whom I’m small talking, who is, by the way, currently shaming me for feeling
like I’m being minimized, gaslit, shamed, or wrong.
Ah, the vicious circle continues.
Feelings are feelings. No one gets to dictate terms of what
is right or wrong for them. No one in a family, the clergy, the school
system, authority positions, or of a certain generation or age demographic.
Again, my visceral reaction is not positive about the small
talk. I’ve tried to change it, force it to happen. I look like the character,
“Templeton” from the animated film version of “Charlotte’s Web” when I do so.
It’s not cute.
And it doesn’t feel cute. Probably because I’m
going against my authentic true feelings!
And that is often what so many of us abuse survivors have
been trained to do!
The sound of my screaming can probably be heard right now if
you open your windows.
Go ahead. Open ‘em.
I’ll wait.
If you want to engage in small talk, that’s one thing. But to
mandate that everyone do likewise, and be giddy about it, is quite
another. It’s not everyone’s bag. Some people hate it. Some people get
triggered and anxious about it. And making anyone wrong because they don’t “hop
to” the banal conversation with the enthusiasm of a lovestruck puppy is insane.
Not all of us are enthusiastic puppies. Some of us flinch.
I guess that’s the consideration I’d like to propose
here. Be aware of the flinch then, please.
An Open or a Shut- Up Mouth?
Small talk can be a manipulative way to assert itself as far
more important than the more real and brutal things we’ve been through in life.
Like abuse.
And, sometimes, it can be weaponized to hurt, belittle, and
silence. Keep talking about this, not that. Keep ignoring the
bleeding wound by putting the small talk Band-Aid on it.
Am I taking this too personally? Yep.
But that’s the point. As harmless as small talk has
been portrayed, it can injure, re-injure, and traumatize those of us already
gun shy concerning human interaction and communication.
Part of abuse’s damaging impact is that, often, while we’re
being abused, we may be told we actually are not, “it’s not that bad,” image
is more important than truth, how we look, versus how we feel is what
matters, and even how other things/people/situations are so much more
important than the stuff we’re “over-reacting” to now.
And what can better exemplify the depiction of the coveted
prettier image, the minimization, and the exalting of “other” over us, perhaps,
more than that of small talk?
What is small talk doing? Keeping things light.
Keeping things social. Keeping things surface. Keeping things distracted.
Yes, there have been plenty of conversations that have
occurred in which there was no harm, no foul. There were no wicked ulterior
motives, schemes, or plans that were set in motion. Lots of small talk has
occurred without murder and other major felonies being committed.
However, small talk has the potential to make its
participants feel unheard, unseen, unvalued, unloved, unimportant. The humanity
can often get sacrificed for the sake of “good conversation.”
That tells me why, then, I often cringe in its presence.
Copyright © 2022 by Sheryle Cruse
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