A good idea but a bad implementation, as doing this is a bit of a nerd stereotype (e.g. Martin from The Simpsons, Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory). IIRC, Leil Lowndes suggests in one of her books that the question “How do you spend your time?” usually be substituted for “What do you do?” With a bit of finessing, it seems like it could replace “How are you?” (maybe “What are you doing today?”—strikes me as similar enough to get the social meaning across, but different enough that you might also get a useful not-automatic response).
A good idea but a bad implementation, as doing this is a bit of a nerd stereotype (e.g. Martin from The Simpsons, Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory). IIRC, Leil Lowndes suggests in one of her books that the question “How do you spend your time?” usually be substituted for “What do you do?” With a bit of finessing, it seems like it could replace “How are you?” (maybe “What are you doing today?”—strikes me as similar enough to get the social meaning across, but different enough that you might also get a useful not-automatic response).
Alternatively, again, use another language.