Wykey wrote:Aled,
Do you think it's healthy for someone who is so out of touch with the recent past?
Aled wrote:It's not recent past. It's 80s and before - and then you're only referring to music. My history of events, politics and showbiz are quite good actually.
Prove it. The Battle of Hastings took place in...?
Wykey wrote:someone who portrays themselves (act or not) as being entirely without common sense
Aled wrote:Again, completely off the mark - I think my common sense is really strong, emotional intelligence is far superior to intellect from an educational point of view.
Why is one more valuable than the other? There are plenty of people for whom emotional intelligence isn't their strongest point who get by perfectly well in life (I'd include myself in that category) and vice-versa.
Wykey wrote:and someone who can't understand even the simplest joke even when it's explained
Aled wrote:It's not that I can't understand, it's that it's not my humour - I just don't have that kind of sense of humour, something I share with my Mum and a lot of other people according to Twitter - I just don't bow to bullying snobs who mock people like me into lying and laughing along politely when I don't get a joke. Try it, tell a fake joke in a group of people and arrange it that everyone else laughs and see whether the person you're telling it to laughs along or not. I wouldn't laugh - because I openly admit I don't get it - others go with the flow. Is that really that bad?
I would think that the reason why a group of people would laugh along politely at a lame joke/a joke they don't get is because it would be quite rude to meet the joke teller's efforts with a stony/blank faced stare, or by saying 'I don't understand that joke/'That's not funny''. I would be cringing inside for the joke teller if someone reacted like that, in the same way as I was cringing so much listening to this morning's link I had to turn off the radio for a bit, which I almost never do with the show. I do like you as a rule Aled, but you were getting right on my last nerve this morning!
I'm currently opening a door of an advent calendar each day with a large group of small children.They insist on me reading out the jokes behind the doors, and even though nearly all of the jokes clearly go right over their heads they always laugh at them. They do so because they know you're supposed to laugh at a joke (even if you don't get it), having already learned that the socially acceptable thing is to 'go with the flow' as you put it. I don't see that as being a bad thing at all, to me it's the along the same lines as teaching a child to say thank you even for a present they really didn't like.
Bonue joke for you from today's door;
What do snowmen ride around on?
Icicles.
Yay or nay to that one Aled?