How To Have Real Conversations – Let’s Humanize Conversations

by Vaibhav Mehta
How to have real conversations

“Hey! How are you?”, “I’m good, thanks, and you?”, “I’m good too”. The end. This is how we converse in real life on a daily basis. By putting closure to everything, we are making very little effort to have a real meaningful conversation. And less meaningful social interactions lead to weaker social equations, lack of personal growth, and poor mental health. Therefore, we need to find ways to escape from the clutches of small talk and revive the art of having a conversation. We need to learn how to have real conversations.

Think about it. When was the last time somebody asked you – “How are you?” and you actually replied what you felt like at that very moment? Can’t recollect it right? That’s the exact problem I’ll be discussing in this blog article.

Our interpersonal skills have nosedived into the depths of shallowness and surface talk. That’s why most of the “Tinder profiles” and “Matrimonial site profiles” are searching for people who possess the art of having a stimulating conversation. Because good conversation is such a turn on.

And yet it’s these same people who reply “I’m good/fine” to every “How are you?”, as if on an automated answering machine mode. There’s irony having an orgasm.


How I Learned To Have Real Conversations Through An Exercise

Learning to have real conversations

I was attending this acting workshop called “The Actor’s Truth” after returning to Mumbai to continue my journey as an actor who’s also a travel blogger. All sixteen of us had assembled in the acting space where the workshop was to take place.

Our mentor for the course Mr. Saurabh Sachdeva introduced himself and then specifically went on to ask “How are you?” to each one of us. And oddly enough, most of us had replied: “I’m good/great”.

What was worse, was that some of us didn’t seem like we were doing good/great by the expression on our faces or our body language. Yet our answers were similar. Our words contradicted our moods and emotions. It felt like we were all the same. The situation reminded me of the sarcastic quote – “You are unique, just like everybody else”.

Then we went on to do an ice-breaking activity that opened us up as it involved a bit of physical movement and interaction. Post the activity, our mentor again asked us the question – “How are you?”

However, this time each one of us had a different answer – tired, feeling hot, warmed up, energetic, light, happy, exhausted, injured, etc., were some of the responses. And these responses got a different reaction from our mentor who was now interested in our individualistic feeling. We were genuinely connecting to him on a human level. We were finally understanding the purpose of the “How are you?” acting exercise.

Although we did go on an alert mode after one of us replied “I feel pukish” but hey, at least it was a stark improvement from the word “good” that we constantly keep using to answer the question.


How Being Descriptive Helps To Have Real Conversations

I think good and nice are two words that were invented by the laziest guys on the planet. Why? Because they are decorative convenient words that don’t tell you anything specific. They just provide quick closure to anything.

A nice guy, good food, a good movie are generic terms that we use on a daily basis. Compare them with a temperamental but soft-spoken and honest guy, flavoursome spicy food, an edge of the seat thriller respectively. What gives you a clearer impression and clarity of thought? The latter statement. Because it’s descriptive, it creates a picture in your head and appeals to your imagination.

When someone is descriptive and specific with respect to their opinion on a topic, then it captures your attention as the conversation is humanized. You feel like taking the discussion forward and contributing your views on the topic as well. Generic words don’t do the conversations any favours as they act like dead ends to a potentially good conversation.

As kids, we were all so expressive, clear, and imaginative. That’s what drew people towards us and made us likeable. Then what happened to us on our way to adulthood?

Our social conditioning of being “good, proper, presentable” at all times and the pre-conceived notion that the other person isn’t interested in us, are the two primary reasons why we fall in the trap of shallow conversation.


How Humanizing a Conversation Got Me Success

Humanizing ourselves is important to have real conversations

I’m an actor and being an actor in Mumbai involves making many rounds to various casting offices day-in & day-out in search of quality work. Making contacts is one thing that everybody kept telling me to do as if it were a chapter in the “Actor’s Bible”.

I failed to understand how does one “make a contact and stay in touch” in a way that doesn’t irritate the other person. Because when you’re in search of work, then a casting director is the sole connecting bridge between you and a good project. So this was my interaction with a reputed casting director 4 years back –

“Hello, Sir! I’m Vaibhav. I spoke to you over the phone.”

*handshake*

“Oh yes! Hi, nice to meet you Vaibhav. How are you?”

“I’m good sir, thanks. And you?”

“I’m great. You can go to my casting assistant and record your introduction. Have a good day.”

“Sure sir. Thanks, and you too!”

This is where it ended and I never got to see the casting director again. I didn’t get any callback from his office and hence, I never got a project from his casting company. Now, where did I lose out?

I lost it in my first interaction with him itself. When a person in power like him meets hundreds of aspiring actors like me in a day, an aimless on-the-surface formal interaction isn’t going to make him remember me. That’s how the thousands of actors he meets in a month, interact with him as well.

I didn’t have a quality interaction with him as I didn’t give him a glimpse of my –

  • Personality,
  • Vulnerability
  • Sense of humour,
  • Skill-set that I’d developed besides acting &
  • My family and acting background.

And therefore, I didn’t sell him my unique selling point. Then how do I expect him to remember me and give me work?

Cut to a recent interaction I had with a casting director which went like this-

“Hello, Sir! I’m Vaibhav.”

*handshake*

“Great to have you at my office Vaibhav, tell me how are you?”

“I’m nervous Sir as you can tell from my sweaty palms. Just hoping to not screw my case of being cast in your next project.”

The casting director laughed, tried to calm me down, and then asked me about my childhood, family background, acting training, and life in general. My one moment of honesty had humanized me in front of him and he felt an instant connection with that quality and wanted to know more about me.

I recently bagged a project through him. That’s the difference that a genuine, heartfelt interaction makes. It humanizes and sensitizes the person towards you and makes them want to have a real conversation with you. It makes them relate to you and reach out to help you if you’re in need. Your admission of vulnerability makes you different from all the other robots who are “good” no matter what’s going on in their life.

That’s the level we should be interacting at if we are to have a peer group where people actually care about us and vice versa. This is how a constructive social circle is made. Not by partying every weekend, clicking selfies and forgetting the person until the next weekend when you’re bored again.


What If People Aren’t Interested In Having Real Conversations?

What if people are not interested to have real conversations?

But why should I open up and speak about my feelings? What if the other person is not interested?

  • Firstly, that’s an assumption you are making out of your inner fear of rejection. You’re cancelling out the possibility of a fruitful conversation in your head even before it happens in reality. So shut those negative voices in your head and speak your mind.
  • Secondly, if the person asking you a question isn’t interested in hearing the answer or having a real conversation, then even better! Such people make your work of eliminating negative superficial people from your life a smoother process. You don’t want people who are friends for namesake anyway, do you?

So what you might assume as a con is also a disguised pro as it helps you build better connections that are emotionally fulfilling. And an emotionally stable person is a happy person. No one ever died of happiness, did they?


Conclusion

Say what’s on your mind. Respect your emotions and admit to them. Live them with honesty. No point wearing a cloak of bravery when all the bottled emotion in you is creating a tornado of discomfort. Don’t indulge in small talk. Put a price on your words and have real conversations with people.

See what difference it makes when you acknowledge your mood, feelings, and emotions. You’ll create a positive vibe around you. You’ll feel much lighter and sleep much better. Try it. Go ahead. But before that, I wanted to ask you a question – “How are you?”


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55 comments

Kim March 25, 2019 - 4:22 am

Lovely post. It is such an eye opener. I try to make my interactions ‘more’ & this just inspires me to want to do it more.

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Magen March 28, 2019 - 1:12 am

This is great! I wish people were more open and honest in conversations.

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francis April 8, 2019 - 6:00 am

being open about yourself to people is great. although I don’t like the idea but will try.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 3:03 pm

Nothing wrong in giving it a try. Do let me know how it works out for you!

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Cristina Petrini April 8, 2019 - 8:42 am

Conversation now are reduced to a minimum stupid pleasantries of thos who do not really want to ask or know anything, we must seekhuman contact and find the joy of sharing

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 3:02 pm

Agree with you. Speaking for the sake of speaking with nothing really coming out of the interaction. We’ve forgotten how to have a real conversation.

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Shubh April 8, 2019 - 9:47 am

I avoid having a conversation with whom its all about formality. I keep my circle with selective people wherein there is no place for formality.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 3:01 pm

I do the same. Superficial people at an arm’s length.

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Michael April 8, 2019 - 1:33 pm

Always depends on the situation really. But thank you for sharing this idea-concept. Knowing you more is a great thing.

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Tara Pittman April 8, 2019 - 4:44 pm

This makes me realize that I need to spend more time in conversations with others. It is about making the time, even if it is only 5 minutes.

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What Corinne Did April 8, 2019 - 5:27 pm

That’s a very interesting post. True that when someone tells me “it’s good” or “nice” at work for example, i am like “anything more to say” coz it could mean anything really!

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:57 pm

I know right? Most of our interactions are borderline vague!

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Amber Myers April 8, 2019 - 5:42 pm

See, I’m an introvert and prefer not to talk to others. I mean, I’m polite and say hello, but I don’t want a full on convo most of the time.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:57 pm

Which is perfectly fine Amber. You aren’t obliged to have a conversation. It’s just to have more meaningful social interactions than superficial ones.

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Brittany Charnley April 8, 2019 - 5:46 pm

I love love love love this post and the conversation that it’s starting! You make some awesome points that we should all be thinking about! Let’s make more connections!

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:55 pm

AMEN to that Brittany!

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Aduke Schulist April 8, 2019 - 10:39 pm

I absolutely hate when people say “Hey how are you?” as they are walking past me.. Just keep on walking and don’t even say hi, because you don’t mean it anyway! I only ask if I have the time for an answer.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:55 pm

Way to go. We need more meaningful social interactions that are fulfilling!

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Sarah Bailey April 8, 2019 - 11:23 pm

This is such a great post I think often it can be hard to be open and honest but it is something we all need to try and do for ourselves.

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Hannah Marie April 9, 2019 - 8:59 am

This is a great article to read for conversation starters. Great guidelines for good communication skills as well. It is gonna help me a lot.

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Kam Balitaan April 9, 2019 - 9:41 am

Guilty of small talks! But I do agree with this. We should be more open and truthful in our conversations.

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Alvern @ Success Unscrambled April 9, 2019 - 11:31 am

These are some great points which I tried in the past and many times I can see the person trying to get away from my conversation. Like you said it is a great way to separate the genuine people from those who are superficial.

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Lina April 9, 2019 - 12:09 pm

You’ve brought up an excellent issue that could be at the table. Thank you.

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Krysten Quiles April 9, 2019 - 12:50 pm

It really depends on who I’m talking to. There are some people in my life that I keep at arms length for a reason.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:53 pm

Hahahahaa I can relate to the arm’s length people.

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Angela Ricardo April 9, 2019 - 1:03 pm

That is a really helpful suggestion that we can all try. Yes I am guilty that I use that word fine or good sometimes. Thanks for the tips!

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kumamonjeng April 9, 2019 - 1:16 pm

Interesting post. In this era, I feel people are cold and all they do is just looking at their phone and do not even have eye-contact and listen to the person they see.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:52 pm

Yeah, phones have sadly replaced actual social interactions. Virtual is like the new reality.

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Terri Beavers April 9, 2019 - 4:21 pm

I love this post as I’m one who always just says, “fine thank you and how are you?” and I leave it at that lol. I’d like to be more open about how I really am and will give it a try next time.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:49 pm

Do give it a try and let me know how it goes Terri!

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Melanie Walsh April 10, 2019 - 5:04 am

I think we rely on those convenient responses as a automated response. It would be great if the “How are you?” questions led into actual conversations. Being able to hold a great conversation is a skill.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:49 pm

Truly is. We all are so deprived of quality conversations. No wonder all the profiles on dating sites have a bio which says “like people who can hold a conversation”.

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Alexandra Cook April 10, 2019 - 5:45 pm

If you talk to your neighbor, you will see that the world is not as broken as the media portrays. This is a really great post.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:48 pm

Quite a basic but interesting point you make there. So many of us don’t even know what’s happening with our immediate neighbours!

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Lyosha April 10, 2019 - 5:56 pm

I agree: there are far too many meaningless conversations where you simply follow patterns, nothing real about you here

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Dr. K. Lee Banks April 11, 2019 - 12:30 am

This made me think of a couple things. One, many people are so attached to their phones, they rarely look up and hold an actual conversation with anyone. Two, this brought me WAY back to my first college experience, when I lived on campus in New York. We had a special speaker one day who addressed this topic of answering the question, “How are you?” – he asked us how often we stop to actually listen to someone’s response if it’s more than “OK” or “Fine.” It was a poignant moment that saw more actual conversations taking place on campus, at least for awhile.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:44 pm

It’s interesting, isn’t it? Yeah there may be people who are asking out of habit but are not really listening to what you have to say. It’s just that you’ll have to trust the sensitivity of the other person to give you the respect and be interested to hear your response to their question.

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aisasami April 11, 2019 - 3:32 pm

This is a thoughtful and deep post. We should think about the others around us as sometimes when they say “I’m great” is a lie. I did it before because I don’t want people to know about my private life.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:39 pm

It’s okay if you want to be secretive about your private life but do speak out and share your problems if you feel the need for it. You might receive help from unexpected corners 🙂

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Swathi April 11, 2019 - 3:37 pm

This world has become fake so you can’t find the real people those who want genuine friendships and talk. If you find them then you are few lucky persons.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:37 pm

True that. It is difficult to find the genuine ones but there’s always light at the end of the tunnel.

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blair villanueva April 12, 2019 - 3:09 am

This actually reminds me of that conversation with my boyfriend. In Australian it is a common greeting of “Hi, GDay! How are you?!” in random person and yeah you can have a reply and a little chit chat. But do that here in the Philippines, and you will received a different response – you are lucky if you got a smile back.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:34 pm

The Philippines sounds not so friendly and a bit grumpy from your experience. I’d love to travel there sometime and experience the social life there.

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Dalene Ekirapa April 13, 2019 - 1:32 pm

I fall short of socializing because I’m one of those people who have it hard starting a conversation. Anyway, it’s funny that when you ask someone ‘how are you?’, they answer back, ‘I’m fine’ just to pass the conversation and not to make one.

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Vaibhav Mehta April 13, 2019 - 2:35 pm

You should try starting a conversation. You’d be surprised how friendly people can be if you send out good vibes.

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Tammy April 14, 2019 - 11:47 am

Since I’ve moved to Italy I do this too often and I always walk away feeling so sad that our interaction doesn’t go deeper/more human. I have to hurry up and learn more Italian so I can truly bond with people here! Cause they are so so nice and everyone has a STORY to tell. Excellent post as usual, Vaibhav!

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Vaibhav Mehta April 14, 2019 - 12:14 pm

Thank you for the read Tammy. I’m jealous of the fact that you are living in Italy haha! Good luck with the Italian lessons.

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Cindy Ingalls April 16, 2019 - 2:08 am

I think we all get trapped in the Fine, Thanks conversation. Mostly, because we are told no one really cares. If that is the case, why ask the question. Instead, we should engage when we feel it and not when we don’t.

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Mayuri Saxena April 16, 2019 - 4:47 am

This is such an interesting post! Sometimes I feel that I should learn from my daughter who doesn’t try to mask her emotions in any situation. It is so important to keep in touch with your emotions and be genuine about it.

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Ewuzie Kingsley April 29, 2019 - 2:25 pm

What an awesome post, this makes so much sense. I must say that I really need to pass this to many of my friends whom I know are victims of the “okay, fine culture”. Thanks for reminding me to always say what’s in my mind and to respect my feelings.

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maysz April 30, 2019 - 10:21 am

Excellent post! Honestly telling someone how you feel is actually the hardest part!

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David Elliott April 30, 2019 - 9:12 pm

I think being honest with yourself and honest with others will make you a much happier person in the long run. I know being able to do it is so very important or else you will never be happy.

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Dani Flanders May 1, 2019 - 7:55 pm

I love the conclusions you made here. What an interesting thought process too … I always automatically say “I’m fine” or “I’m good” when asked how I’m doing. What a great opportunity to connect with people when they ask that question though! I’m definitely going to think about this more in the future!

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Becca Talbot May 6, 2019 - 10:33 pm

Interesting post – some helpful tips and pointers here that I must start following! Conversations shouldn’t be for the sake of it.

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Beauty Fashion September 15, 2021 - 9:06 pm

Nice read, I just passed this onto a colleague who was doing a little research on that. And he just bought me lunch because I found it for him. Thus let me rephrase that: Thank you for lunch!

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