- Joined
- Jul 6, 2020
- Messages
- 633
Fortunately today I was on the good end of this.
We had just finished a track meet earlier this evening, and my (boys and girls) track team was loading the bus to leave. I and most of the others on the team were sitting on the bus minding our own business.
Soon after one of my teammates just got on the bus he walked up beside me and told me to get up from his seat. Apparently he was sitting there the last time. Its proper custom here to sit where you sat last time to avoid arguments like this.
Nobody was really paying attention to us at this point. But, I didn’t like how rude he asked it.
Plus I’m trying to be more of an asshole. So I stayed put and pointed to another possible seat for him.
It was a less desirable seat because he’d have to share the space with someone.
He kept insisting, with stuff like “get the fuck up and sit over there”. At that point I know the confrontation was getting too emotional for me to budge, so I stayed put.
I even offered him to sit next to the window beside me but he wanted the whole seat.
It kept escalating. Eventually it got extremely emotional (on his end). Imagine seeing a black man turn red and threatening to swing at you.
I was incredibly chill nonverbally. Kept very strong eye contact and body language. I was kind of lost on what to say verbally though
Soon it got to the point where the whole entire bus was looking at this idiot yell at me over a seat. All I did was calmly tell him to either sit with me or find another one (which I suspect pissed him off more.)
Once people heard enough to understand the argument that was happening, they started chiming in. Most were telling him to “just sit down”, but one time I heard a girl yell for me to just get up as well.
Eventually the coach broke it up and told him to sit down somewhere else. He was fuming angry yelling at me that he “wont forget this” (wtf lmao).
after the argument commended me and said I made him look dumb just looking at him calmly.
————————————————————
While I did “win” this encounter, it made me realize that the court of public opinion is a fair factor in emotional arguments like this.
I feel like the main reason public opinion was with me was because of the huge nonverbal difference between us.
I was calm and steady and he was crazy and mad, which led to them taking my side automatically.
But I have also had experiences (even in the exact situation!) where public opinion was with the other guy.
It feels overwhelming with everybody telling you to move, and the guy you’re arguing with having a strengthened frame because of it.
Public opinion being against you in an argument seems like a double bind, especially when you also have to handle your reputation. Capitulate and you lose massive respect and emotional momentum. Double down and you lose massive likability. Up to me I’d rather have the respect, but I want both.
What do you do in public emotional arguments with public opinion against you?
We had just finished a track meet earlier this evening, and my (boys and girls) track team was loading the bus to leave. I and most of the others on the team were sitting on the bus minding our own business.
Soon after one of my teammates just got on the bus he walked up beside me and told me to get up from his seat. Apparently he was sitting there the last time. Its proper custom here to sit where you sat last time to avoid arguments like this.
Nobody was really paying attention to us at this point. But, I didn’t like how rude he asked it.
Plus I’m trying to be more of an asshole. So I stayed put and pointed to another possible seat for him.
It was a less desirable seat because he’d have to share the space with someone.
He kept insisting, with stuff like “get the fuck up and sit over there”. At that point I know the confrontation was getting too emotional for me to budge, so I stayed put.
I even offered him to sit next to the window beside me but he wanted the whole seat.
It kept escalating. Eventually it got extremely emotional (on his end). Imagine seeing a black man turn red and threatening to swing at you.
I was incredibly chill nonverbally. Kept very strong eye contact and body language. I was kind of lost on what to say verbally though
Soon it got to the point where the whole entire bus was looking at this idiot yell at me over a seat. All I did was calmly tell him to either sit with me or find another one (which I suspect pissed him off more.)
Once people heard enough to understand the argument that was happening, they started chiming in. Most were telling him to “just sit down”, but one time I heard a girl yell for me to just get up as well.
Eventually the coach broke it up and told him to sit down somewhere else. He was fuming angry yelling at me that he “wont forget this” (wtf lmao).
after the argument commended me and said I made him look dumb just looking at him calmly.
————————————————————
While I did “win” this encounter, it made me realize that the court of public opinion is a fair factor in emotional arguments like this.
I feel like the main reason public opinion was with me was because of the huge nonverbal difference between us.
I was calm and steady and he was crazy and mad, which led to them taking my side automatically.
But I have also had experiences (even in the exact situation!) where public opinion was with the other guy.
It feels overwhelming with everybody telling you to move, and the guy you’re arguing with having a strengthened frame because of it.
Public opinion being against you in an argument seems like a double bind, especially when you also have to handle your reputation. Capitulate and you lose massive respect and emotional momentum. Double down and you lose massive likability. Up to me I’d rather have the respect, but I want both.
What do you do in public emotional arguments with public opinion against you?