Liking gap-czy ludzie lubią nas bardziej niż myślimy? - Liking gap - do people like us more than we think?
Liking gap in English can be translated as a gap in likes or a gap in liking. We encounter this phenomenon quite often. It can occur, for example, at a meeting with a newly met person or an interview for a new job. We have fears and doubts whether we have made a good impression and we presented ourselves correctly. We usually judge ourselves worse than we actually look in the eyes of other people.
Negative thinking comes from several reasons
-by using many polite phrases, we do not reveal our true feelings
-having the conviction in advance that the interlocutor may not like us, we are reluctant to express interest
-when establishing relationships, we are too focused on ourselves and what to say next, and we do not pay attention to the signals of sympathy that the interlocutor sends us
Then we wonder if we didn't say too much or too little or maybe we were too boring. Many people tend to be very self-critical. To a large extent, what we think about ourselves is how we think others judge us.
You can deal with this by working on self-esteem and self-confidence, by knowing your strengths and weaknesses, not comparing yourself to others, by being more understanding of yourself and setting realistic expectations for yourself.
Liking gap in English can be translated as a gap in likes or a gap in liking. We encounter this phenomenon quite often. It can occur, for example, at a meeting with a newly met person or an interview for a new job. We have fears and doubts whether we have made a good impression and we presented ourselves correctly. We usually judge ourselves worse than we actually look in the eyes of other people.
Negative thinking comes from several reasons
-by using many polite phrases, we do not reveal our true feelings
-having the conviction in advance that the interlocutor may not like us, we are reluctant to express interest
-when establishing relationships, we are too focused on ourselves and what to say next, and we do not pay attention to the signals of sympathy that the interlocutor sends us
Then we wonder if we didn't say too much or too little or maybe we were too boring. Many people tend to be very self-critical. To a large extent, what we think about ourselves is how we think others judge us.
You can deal with this by working on self-esteem and self-confidence, by knowing your strengths and weaknesses, not comparing yourself to others, by being more understanding of yourself and setting realistic expectations for yourself.
4 users upvote it!
1 answer