Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will admit that I like saying hi to neighbors. I don’t want to be best friends but we live in a low traffic area. Nodding hello makes this area feel smaller. I recognize that not everyone wants to say to everyone who passes their path, that’s fine.
We have one neighbor who lives in our small cul de sac and still does not want to say hi, even if we are very close physically. This is beyond bizarre to me. I’m not a random person from 3 streets over. We met each other when we moved in and then I would say hi after that and they would reluctantly wave. They will not acknowledge at all if someone else doesn’t initiate and even then it’s perfunctory. sometimes they will even ignore that. They have young kids and otherwise seem like regular people. I am still determining if this is particular to me or everyone.
Can someone help me understand the psychology? I really don’t get it and would like to understand. It would make my day worse to be so sour. Or do they tune out other people somehow and that gives them peace? Or do they not like me for some reason?
From 2012-2017, we had a horrible experience with multiple nosy, boundary-crossing neighbors. To the point that two of my kids were really freaked out by how intrusive these neighbors were. We moved and have been standoffish every since. We’ll wave, but don’t want to have any verbal interaction for fear that it seems like an invitation to have a conversation. Some day, we’ll get over the stalkerish neighbors of the past, but my kids are ultra private teens now and still chary.[/quote
This is pretty much what we have decided. Our issue was that it was not just one neighbor, it was 3 of them who hang out together and live close to us. It devolved to the extent that I’d rather be thought of as stand-offish instead of singling these people out. We now start at a baseline of polite but standoffish and don’t encourage closeness. It has worked out well because a lot of the houses have turned over to younger couples who will likely live here for a while. So, it made sense to establish boundaries at the get go.
Anonymous wrote:I will admit that I like saying hi to neighbors. I don’t want to be best friends but we live in a low traffic area. Nodding hello makes this area feel smaller. I recognize that not everyone wants to say to everyone who passes their path, that’s fine.
We have one neighbor who lives in our small cul de sac and still does not want to say hi, even if we are very close physically. This is beyond bizarre to me. I’m not a random person from 3 streets over. We met each other when we moved in and then I would say hi after that and they would reluctantly wave. They will not acknowledge at all if someone else doesn’t initiate and even then it’s perfunctory. sometimes they will even ignore that. They have young kids and otherwise seem like regular people. I am still determining if this is particular to me or everyone.
Can someone help me understand the psychology? I really don’t get it and would like to understand. It would make my day worse to be so sour. Or do they tune out other people somehow and that gives them peace? Or do they not like me for some reason?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one says “Hi” in NYC unless you explicitly know them. People live in the same apartment building for years and years and will ignore each other!
Most urban areas are like this. If you want friend, get a dog.
I disagree. I lived in NYC for over a decade — and in the buildings where I lived, in stores, and even on the street, people usually spoke to each other, more often than not. NYC is one of the friendliest places I’ve lived. Maybe I just lived in unusually friendly neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:No one says “Hi” in NYC unless you explicitly know them. People live in the same apartment building for years and years and will ignore each other!
Most urban areas are like this. If you want friend, get a dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a DC thing. Weird people here. I have not lived anywhere else where neighbors are so strained to say hello.
+1. My experience, as well. I chalked it up to (1) the DMV has a high percentage of professionally-striving but socially-stunted people; and (2) the DMV is an area where you cannot turn around without bumping into five people, standing in a line, or waiting in traffic no matter where you go. My theory is that the people here put up additional fences/personal space around themselves as a way of blocking out all the continual people "noise" -- and maybe they don't even realize they're doing it. It is impossible to get away from people around here, no matter where you go. Not saying "hi" might be a way of saying "I can't deal with dealing with more people" without saying it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a DC thing. Weird people here. I have not lived anywhere else where neighbors are so strained to say hello.
You have not lived in Ny or the NE then. They make Washingtonians look nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White people love “privacy”
Here we go with this race baiting crap again.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is a DC thing. Weird people here. I have not lived anywhere else where neighbors are so strained to say hello.