Just what in the hell do you think you’re trying to do here, Tamerlane? I’m trying to be all passive/aggressive over here, and you have to drop a steaming load of reasonableness in the thread.
I’m faced with the same situation every day at work. When I go eat my lunch, I don’t want to speak to anyone. I’m reading the newspaper, trying to do the crossword puzzle (which I am still pathetic at solving), or reading a book. I have to go out of my way to find places where I won’t run into co-workers. When I sit in the common lunch area in the office, I sit facing the wall instead of near the window where I would prefer so that there is less chance that people will join me.
However, when people see me reading and sit at my table (either in the office, or outside at one of the nearby restaurants), I’ll stop reading and talk to them. If people ask me “Can I join you”, I’ll stop reading and say “sure”. In my mind, that is the polite behaviour. Most people that do this are trying to be friendly. The general assumption in society today is that people need other people, and that someone who is alone will want company. I think this is biologically determined because Homo sapiens evolved as a social animal. If we were tigers then ity would be different and you could eat in piece.
It’s just something you have to live with. If you want to tell the person “no, go sit somewhere else”, or “no, I don’t want to talk to you”, then you have to be aware that many people will think it’s rude. I don’t think it’s a great crime but you’ll have to live with the fact that there’s a good chance you will offend the other person.
To the OP: I won’t say you are being a jerk, but you are engaging in behaviour that many people will think is rude. If you’re willing to live with that, that’s fine.
As much as you’d like to think you’re not “assigning any sort of blame or accusations,” I think it’s pretty clear what you think here: that people have an obligation to acquiesce to rude behavior. And we don’t. And you know what? Embarassment that someone feels as a result of their own rude behavior is a great teaching tool. I’m damned certain that the next time this coworker wants to join someone at a meal, he’s going to ask first instead of just inviting himself.
The best way to help people learn polite behavior is to lead them to realize where they screwed up so they can be embarassed and not do it again–not by explicitly pointing it out to them, but by refusing to play along.
I was thinking more along the lines of an icy, “Excuse me?” The OP did not ignore the coworker, any more than refusing to answer a question is ignoring it–he acknowledged him, and politely informed him that he was going to continue doing what he had been doing. *Had *he simply ignored the other man completely, *that *would have been rude.
Rudeness shouldn’t be answered with rudeness, but *refusing to accomodate an interruption *is not rude.
Actually, I think part of it’s because extroverts have been allowed to set the rules, by virtue of talking more and louder. No one listens to introverts.
In the realms of “Rudeness shouldn’t be answered with rudeness” **SFG, **"an icy, “Excuse me?” is pretty damn rude in my book (that I’m not reading at the table).
“I’m sorry - that’s not a question I am obligated to, or prepared to answer” isn’t rude at all; and does not embarrass the questioner. Your idea that embarrassment is a good ‘learning tool’ is not a leaf I’ll take from your book (that you’re reading at the table).
Claiming that the co-worker will now *never *approach a table uninvited is quite a stretch and simply not true; the most that may be achieved is that he will never approach madmonk’s table again.
Look. You introverts just don’t *want *to set the rules. Unless it’s about not saying anything. So just say something about not saying anything and then shut up. The noise from you lot is making my hat all buzzy.
Honestly, if I’m reading a book somewhere, and am perfectly happy doing so, and you just want to dribble on despite all the social signals I’m sending out, then you can can cock of you fucking drooling idiot.
Sure, I’ll ask Elan if I can sit with him. And he’ll probably be glad of the company, but then he’s pretty needy. And he doesn’t just wear puppets, he worships them.
There’s a few strips where Elan is nekkid, too, but I don’t feel like digging through the archives any longer.
Seriously, though, in the OP’s case, I probably would have put my book down and chatted. But I still believe that the coworker was much ruder than the OP, because he didn’t ask to join, he just assumed he’d be welcome, and when it was clear that the OP wanted to get back to his book, the coworker was rude AGAIN when he tried to guilt him into talking. The coworker should have tried to find someone who wanted company.