Have any of you noticed a change in the vaccinated? Not just the normal liberal minded lunacy but in their temperament?
In my family and friends I have noticed very short tempers flaring in people who were always calm. I have noticed a loss of compassion in the people that used to be compassionate. Nice people becoming downright hateful.
I am just reaching out for other's experiences.
Emotion. Some one was talking about the shift of young people. Asking for directions it used to be 'I think you go up main, over the hill, at the light left at 116th, right at NE Jackson, it should be on your right after that.'
Now: 'Ummm... Home Depot? I feel like that is over that way."
Big key difference: I think vs I feel like
In my youth it was always "up your ass and to the left". my how times have changed.
I like "I feel" better than "I think".
It's even known that to say "I think" automatically causes you to loose credibility with whoever is listening.
The person talking about it was highlighting the shift from older to younger and how they process things. The older ones connected more to facts, but the younger folks would all be emotional. IE young people tend to be snowflakes.
To me it feels like those that got jabbed are becoming more emotional. They seem to react poorly to being challenged in their beliefs.
I am in my mid-40s. A family member in the service industry would also comment about the shift. Similar observations and hate for the snowflakes, yet he is mostly on their wave length. (MSM)
It sounds like you are younger or have a stronger writing background? Keeping focus on the subject sort of thing?
People's communication via speech is very different than written communication. Yet, texting is closer to speech not formal writing.
“I feel” is a very feminine perspective. You should absolutely have no feelings surrounding the task of giving directions. IMHO.
But in that context either expression tells the person asking that they don't know the directions.
If I knew the directions I'd start off by saying, "You want to go this way up main, take a left on 1st..."
If I know the directions I would not say "I think" or "I feel" because both indicate an unknown area
I'm not from around here.
I think is known to be a week terminology, and if you want to sound strong and confident it's suggested that you don't ever say "I think".
True that