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adamcfollowshare
9-23-2006 1:17 AM
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adamc says:
Descriptions for each at the source.

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23 Comments   | Add a Comment
9-23-2006 10:20 AM
Kore7
Great advice.
9-23-2006 11:53 AM
dfiskey
love this-- great post.
9-23-2006 4:06 PM
adamc
Oh, you guys are becoming more likeable by the minute
9-24-2006 11:57 AM
skwirlinator
6. Be yourself / Be honest
9-24-2006 11:59 AM
skwirlinator
7. Don't make others live by your expectations of who they should be.
9-24-2006 12:00 PM
skwirlinator
8. Respect other peoples ideas and traditions
9-24-2006 12:02 PM
skwirlinator
9. Bathe
9-24-2006 12:03 PM
skwirlinator
10. Talk softly
9-24-2006 5:16 PM
Godfrey Daniel
I find people who have no interest in being deemed likable to be the most likable, and persons who've mastered the study and contrivances--Bill Clinton is a good example--to be the least.
9-26-2006 9:28 AM
beverlyc
brilliant advice. is it really that simple?
9-26-2006 3:43 PM
anonymology
I don't need to try any harder, don't ye know!

(But I'll make a note anyway!)
10-10-2006 6:13 AM
son of socrates
These tips, which (besides tip 4, where the use of 'prejudice' would've been better than 'judgment') are in essence great ones. Only a pity that they're here being misused for a distasteful eagerness to be liked.

If you'd ever accidentally become popular, it better be because you haven't consciously strived for it, but because people happen to like the person you've become, with the sole purpose of 'being' instead of chasing other people's approval.

The approval of others simply relies too much on the emotional state of those others, and the requirements for being liked can change by the day, and are not within your control. These people will be the sculptors of the sculpture that you will...
10-25-2006 2:42 PM
Godfrey Daniel
Your daddie would be proud.
10-28-2006 9:27 AM
kmcolo
The key is to do it all genuinely, without falseness. Sadly for those who are simply following these guidelines (and not "living" them) many of us can see through the farce and we have less respect for them than we would for someone who is genuinely less "nice".
10-29-2006 12:40 PM
rocky9191
I love this clip, keep them comming
11-2-2006 3:21 AM
cylons
good ideas, in theory. but i need tips on applying the tips. like how to be positive when everything sux0rz, or how to control my insecurities when even the most delightful pharmaceutical combinations cannot?
11-4-2006 4:02 AM
Torley
I love positive advice like this! Often when actually applying stuff like this, there's phases involved: a period of self-doubt, especially if things've gone badly lately, is expected.

It's like how a real expert *knows* they're one, they don't often say "I'm an expert". Same with likeable people, they don't have to proclaim "I'm adored!" altho some comedians do it, self-deprecatingly.

@cylons: I don't think everything sux0rz. For one, you're on here posting, so that's +1 — you have access to advanced technology which a lot of poor people in the world don't!
11-4-2006 11:07 PM
Godfrey Daniel
Try this, Cylons
11-7-2006 11:58 PM
enbar
I hate likeable people.
11-22-2006 6:27 AM
aka_teabag
being likeable does not mean you are a nice person. George W bush was liked by enough NICE Americans to vote him into office. He has since taken his AND other nations to war for his own ill gotten gains. He has stripped the american people of their freedoms and called it The War Against Terror. What a diamond he is (not)
5-2-2007 7:38 AM
michellezm
I have never met a human being who didn't want to be liked. Only people suffering from a schizoid or anti-social personality disorder are exempt.

Let's cut the crap. The desire to be loved, liked, respected, heard and acknowledged is inherent in ALL all of us, save for some of the mentally ill. This need is the very foundation upon which society is built.

Our greatest fears, other than death, is our abject terror of rejection and criticism.

Coupled to this are two sides to our nature - we are Januses - we ALL have two sides - some more pronounced than others. And likeability is choosing to present the better part of oneself.. I see no crime in that. God knows, it greases the unplal...
5-2-2007 7:54 AM
michellezm
PS/ I have noticed that the people who give the appearance of being 'above' this need are actually those most in need. You know the deeper the need, the bigger the bluster - it's a decoy to hide vulnerability.
5-3-2007 1:30 AM
enbar
That's true, I think. Everyone wants to be liked. But being "likeable" may not be the best way to be liked, honestly. This clip has a kind of Polonius-like style, to me anyhow.
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