Mr Happy said:
Agree with geo. When heading low my mind starts to spin somewhat and i am often just concentrating on trying to make sense. My little boy was talking to me at about a million words a minute the other day, when he finally stopped he just asked "what's up"?
Alternatively, have you considered you may just have feelings of hostility ;-)
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I've always had sort of 'intense' eyes. I seem to use my eyes to 'tune in' to people. I'm very sensitive to body language and I also lip read to an extent. I can't handle it when people come at me and start talking at 100mph. It feels like an assault on my senses.
I know that children often do speak rapidly and it's to be expected but it also seems to have become the norm for many adults to 'spew' out whatever information they're trying to convey in as short a time as possible. Working in a hospital, I answer the telephone numerous times in a day and I'm still shocked at the number of people who ... don't give their name or ask mine, but just blurt out their message at the rate of knots without even stopping to check if I'm keeping up. To me it's just the same as someone suddenly playing loud music at me at a fast pace. I just want to find the knob and turn it down or switch the damned thing off.
When children do it we ask them to slow down, explain that it's rude, that we can't understand them and that way we get them to correct themselves. But when adults do it I draw the line at having to play 'Mum' and start lecturing them on communication etiquette.
So what I do now is, let them ramble on until they're breathless ... because I get breathless having to try to interrupt them. Then I ask them to start again, beginning with their name. And these are not children, these are professional people and the reason they feel they can 'communicate' in this way is because they're 'so busy' and also 'important' and have so much to do.
When anyone, usually managers or supervisors bark orders at me at a rate of knots too, I tend to stare at them intently in the hope they'll realise I can't understand a b****y word they're saying. Sometimes they're so intent on this 'getting up to speed' lark that the message comes out in a series of disjointed half sentences that the listener has to try to piece together. Often people who try to convey a message very quickly, speak in this way without realising it, which leaves the rest of us staring intently at them in an effort to put two and two together.