Anonymous wrote:I've never known a smart, intellectually curious person who didn't like board games. I can see not liking a particular board game, but when I think to all of our family on both sides, friends, neighborhoods, etc. the smart, interesting ones all like board games.
Anonymous wrote:I hate, no, *loathe*, board games. To me, they are mind numbing. At family or friend events, I’m more than happy to sit amongst the group playing and spectate, and to contribute to any ancillary conversation that may be happening. But no! I’m expected to “take one for the team” and join in. It’s just a game, after all. It won’t kill me to play a hand of Uno.
Why can’t I just sit it out? Why don’t we allow people this grace without giving them a browbeating and all but insisting? Why can’t the others “take one for the team”and just gather around and socialize? Pick a topic and get philosophical. That’s what I’d want to do. Or put on some music and dance! It’s totally fine when people don’t want to have deep conversation, or if they don’t want dance. But say you don’t want to play the game and everything goes to hell.
Why?
Anonymous wrote:I don't trust people who don't like games. Or dogs. Or the beach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never known a smart, intellectually curious person who didn't like board games. I can see not liking a particular board game, but when I think to all of our family on both sides, friends, neighborhoods, etc. the smart, interesting ones all like board games.
NP - I'm very smart and intellectually curious, but I don't like sitting still for hours. So, sure, in theory it would be fun to play a game and chat with friends, the reality isn't physically comfortable for me. I have other smart friends who feel the same way.
Anonymous wrote:No reason to not host your own events.
I would love attending philosophical salons if the people aren’t pompous jerks. In grad school, it was roughly 50/50 smart people who love exchanging ideas and people who thought they were smarter than everyone else so they came to lecture.