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My Dad, born in the 1920s, was from the school of men do not talk much. Growing up, that was normal to me. My Mom chatted, but only rarely did my Dad participate in a long conversation. He would watch a baseball game and maybe say thirty words throughout in two word bursts like "bad choice" when someone got thrown out trying to steal second. If we were debating something at home, he would normally say nothing and then give his opinion, sometime with nothing more than a look. He had friends like this who also hardly ever talked, but would come over and sit with my Dad for hours watching a game and not talking much, maybe share some food or a drink, say thank you and go home.
My girlfriend's Dad, also born in the 1920s, is a bit more of a talker, but he still has the same style of only occasionally chatting, normally listening and then saying nothing or offering a brief comment. At Christmas, when the women go shopping or something, we'll watch a movie or a game and we'll hardly exchange a word for hours at a time. I enjoy this - it's a comfortable way to be in someone's company, but not have to keep a constant stream of conversation going - versus the non-stop verbal assault that seems the norm today, but it got me to thinking if others on this board have noticed that it seems that an entire breed of men - or at least a style of conversing - is going away?
Not that I am against conversation - I'm more of a talker than my Dad, but way less than the standard of today - but I think we are losing that subset of men.
My girlfriend's Dad, also born in the 1920s, is a bit more of a talker, but he still has the same style of only occasionally chatting, normally listening and then saying nothing or offering a brief comment. At Christmas, when the women go shopping or something, we'll watch a movie or a game and we'll hardly exchange a word for hours at a time. I enjoy this - it's a comfortable way to be in someone's company, but not have to keep a constant stream of conversation going - versus the non-stop verbal assault that seems the norm today, but it got me to thinking if others on this board have noticed that it seems that an entire breed of men - or at least a style of conversing - is going away?
Not that I am against conversation - I'm more of a talker than my Dad, but way less than the standard of today - but I think we are losing that subset of men.