Or possibly just “Hugs okay?”, sans the arms outstretched (it can create pressure; the person has signalled very loudly in social terms, so the other person’s denial can lead to face loss; people who’ve been socialized to be sensitive to that, whether for cultural or other reasons, might find the outstretched arms add pressure. Fine for folks who’ve no issue asserting their boundaries loudly and clearly without concern for face, but that’s not even enough of everybody to be a really good rule, I think.)
Hm. I’ve not tried that myself, but as someone who had a lot of past awkwardness and cluelessness in social situations, and now does alright, it strikes me as not a good move. My sense is that it’ll just look like a different flavor of awkward-confused, albeit one that puts less direct pressure on the person.
Jandila’s response here illustrates the vital point that common sense is not a safe way to read advice in this area. If you need advice, what you consider common sense will often be deeply wrong.
I don’t think a commonsense reading of this rule would prohibit holding one’s arms up and saying “Hugs?”
Or possibly just “Hugs okay?”, sans the arms outstretched (it can create pressure; the person has signalled very loudly in social terms, so the other person’s denial can lead to face loss; people who’ve been socialized to be sensitive to that, whether for cultural or other reasons, might find the outstretched arms add pressure. Fine for folks who’ve no issue asserting their boundaries loudly and clearly without concern for face, but that’s not even enough of everybody to be a really good rule, I think.)
Is being vague with who it’s directed at and counting on something like the bystander effect a good hack for that?
Hm. I’ve not tried that myself, but as someone who had a lot of past awkwardness and cluelessness in social situations, and now does alright, it strikes me as not a good move. My sense is that it’ll just look like a different flavor of awkward-confused, albeit one that puts less direct pressure on the person.
Jandila’s response here illustrates the vital point that common sense is not a safe way to read advice in this area. If you need advice, what you consider common sense will often be deeply wrong.