It seems a weird question, but I've only just realized I can't remember the last time I actually answered the random question cashiers everywhere throw out there... the oddly strange; "So how's your day been?"
I respond but I can't remember thr last time I answered. Usually it is; "Oh, you know...You?" ... or "Can't complain. How's yours?" It's not really an answer ... more like; "I can't be bothered to find out right now, why are you asking? Where can this exchange possibly go?"
It's a weird question that is kind of... offputting. I have a pretty awful case of schizophrenia. So if I'm outside the apartment during daylight hours it's probably a fairly decent day by simple fact that the paranoia and demons aren't telling me to go home and hide. But despite that fact it's not a question you actually can have an answer for without it becoming awkward.
It's not like I can jump up, smile wide, and say; "Great! The voices are manageable today, and I feel like I can connect with people without assuming they might hurt me!..." or... "Oh, all kinds of shit. The world's coming down and I am seriously questioning the assumption of a shared material reality that this moment is actually happening between us...."
What real answer to that question that isn't entirely facile or leads to scary, panic button clicking? Nobody recognizes whether they're actually having a good day or not until they try to quantify it... and in that moment it just becomes awkward. Because no answer can be practiced and yet still meaningful.
It's an odd distinction... but I'd prefer it when cashiers simply say; "So how're you doing this [insert specific time period]?" That seems like a much better way to ask the same thing without making it feel awkward. The answer can be visceral. Unprocessed and organic. That question is way easier to respond to. "Pretty good. Just doing some shopping. Saw the top you had in the display and I definitely needed something cas-formal for this weekend..." so on and so forth.
People feel good in the moment they decide to buy something. Capitalise on it. Don't make it awkward.
I respond but I can't remember thr last time I answered. Usually it is; "Oh, you know...You?" ... or "Can't complain. How's yours?" It's not really an answer ... more like; "I can't be bothered to find out right now, why are you asking? Where can this exchange possibly go?"
It's a weird question that is kind of... offputting. I have a pretty awful case of schizophrenia. So if I'm outside the apartment during daylight hours it's probably a fairly decent day by simple fact that the paranoia and demons aren't telling me to go home and hide. But despite that fact it's not a question you actually can have an answer for without it becoming awkward.
It's not like I can jump up, smile wide, and say; "Great! The voices are manageable today, and I feel like I can connect with people without assuming they might hurt me!..." or... "Oh, all kinds of shit. The world's coming down and I am seriously questioning the assumption of a shared material reality that this moment is actually happening between us...."
What real answer to that question that isn't entirely facile or leads to scary, panic button clicking? Nobody recognizes whether they're actually having a good day or not until they try to quantify it... and in that moment it just becomes awkward. Because no answer can be practiced and yet still meaningful.
It's an odd distinction... but I'd prefer it when cashiers simply say; "So how're you doing this [insert specific time period]?" That seems like a much better way to ask the same thing without making it feel awkward. The answer can be visceral. Unprocessed and organic. That question is way easier to respond to. "Pretty good. Just doing some shopping. Saw the top you had in the display and I definitely needed something cas-formal for this weekend..." so on and so forth.
People feel good in the moment they decide to buy something. Capitalise on it. Don't make it awkward.