Highly specific question, I know.
When people compliment me, I genuinely don’t know what to do. It feels like they’ve given me a physical object, and I’m just standing there holding it awkwardly, but I don’t know what to do with it.
Complements and praise does nothing for me emotionally, so I just say “thank you”; in the same way you thank a kid that handed you a rock they found on the ground.
Like, I appreciate the sentiment — as in, I know they’re trying to be nice or something, so it doesn’t bother me. It’s just one of many small things that makes social stuff a bit harder. For example, I probably don’t give out any complements to other people, because it doesn’t occur to me as an important thing to do. I’m sure this has many effects in my life I’m not aware of.
it confuses me because I have my own internal model of what i was trying to do. I know what I’m capable of. Executing on my capabilities doesn’t seem praiseworthy.
If I’m capable of 95%, and I only execute at 90%, then I feel like I’ve done poorly. But if everyone else is only executing at 75% then just because my model says “I could have done better” it can still feel weird getting praise, even if it is “justified”
Not really confused by it, but I find it suspicious by default. Most of the time, I just say thank you to politely accept it.
Half the time, I tend to find that people are trying to just butter me up to get something out of me. Disingenuity is very grating on my sensibilities and it can lower my opinion of people who tend to behave in that way.
I used to take it personally, like that person thinks I’m dumb enough to buy into their petty manipulation. Now I understand that lots of people just carelessly, all-around, do this to score points they can cash in on later. I just pretend I don’t notice and say thank you anyway; I don’t think I could offer anything but a sincere compliment, myself.
Especially salespeople. In my experience we both end up confused and then awkwardly back away from each other 😂
So true!
When I bought my truck I said, “If you keep talking, I will buy it from somoene else. Let me drive and I will make my decision.”
You know, in true autistic fashion.
Complements and praise does nothing for me emotionally, so I just say “thank you”; in the same way you thank a kid that handed you a rock they found on the ground.
That’s exactly how you do it, according to John Cleese, anyway.
I’m always deeply suspicious of compliments because they’re sometimes used to manipulate me, especially if it’s from strangers or people I only know superficially. But a brief “thank you, that means a lot” + an internal recalibration to find out what the fuck this person actually wants from me is what I usually do.
I find it confusing when the compliment seems arbitrary but I just say “thank you” and move on.
I’m so not used to it that it startles me for a second. I love it, I crave it, but it rarely ever happens.
On the rare occasion it does happen, I get suspicious that it’s a trick and they’re trying to manipulate me. I’ve been taken advantage of a lot in my life. I used to be very gullible.
I agree with this 100%.
The best compliments I have received, the things I remember and carry with me, are things people have said about me in other contexts.
For example, when I got my diagnosis the psychologist noted that my mood was “euthymic” for my in-person testing. I have always prided myself on my stability and emotional balance, so to see that in a clinical evaluation felt really good.
Another example: my best friend found out, shortly after he broke up with her, that his ex-gf was pregnant. She offered him a choice: stay as a friend and support the child, or leave and never hear from either of them again. I was trying to convince him to stay. That the child would be 50% him, that I would be right there with him to help and support him. He said “I don’t think I can. I’m not strong like you.” He was crying. That was the last time I ever saw him.
That was by far the best compliment I have ever received, because of the context. He wasn’t trying to flatter me or butter me up. He wasn’t trying to cheer me up and finding something to say. It really wasn’t about me at all, and that’s what made it so genuine.
Yeah, when people notice where you are putting your efforts. That’s really all that matters for the feel-good aspect of compliments.
It’s exactly like that. The best thing is to say thank you and continue on.
It depends on what is being praised/complimented and how its delivered. Part of it depends on how much effort I put into the thing they’re complimenting/praising. Also depends on if the thing they are complimenting/praising is just part of masking.
This might be gendered or I just don’t understand men, but I believe that when women are complimented by other women they are expected to say “Thanks!” or downplay the compliment just a little but in either case return the compliment. It can be considered a sign you don’t like someone if you don’t.
I do compliment people but when I notice something specific and I want to compliment them on it, so it was a bit hard to adapt to. Hair, new looking clothes or jewelry are typically safe bets. I avoid complementing someone’s body unless they are speaking about working out and even then I keep it vague, “You look so strong!”.
ETA: I can’t read, apparently. For praise a “thanks” or mentioning people who helped is generally what is expected. If you think people are expecting something else it’s probably that they are waiting to hear who you will give credit to or return the praise to them.
For example, if you do well on a presentation: “Thanks! I wouldn’t have been able to do it without X, they got me all the data and formatted it so nicely.”
Or if you do well at a competitive sport and the person complimenting you was your opponent: "Aw, thanks. You really gave me a run for my money. Where did you learn to [sport skill].
I guess it comes down to knowing if the person is looking for bonding (compliment them back), wanting to praise you but expecting humility (thanking the people who helped you) or feeling insecure (lost at sports or feels inadequate compared to your skills).
I find the only compliments dudes share are when you have the same ‘thing’ as them. Same shirt, same vehicle… same… no… nope. thats all of them.
I do agree, it seems completely meaningless and do nothing. Like why are you doing it? What’s it’s supposed to do? Just whats the point or purpose of it?
So i just say ok(acknowledge that i received the information) or thanks(activate basic social script) and move on, depending how close to the person i am.
Praise has always kinda made me mildly uncomfortable, because I really don’t like a lot of attention on me. I prefer to stay in the background as much as possible.
When I get praise I smile and say thank you and that’s pretty much it. When it happens it takes me by such surprise that it’s the only thing I can think to do or say. No further platitudes like “I really appreciate that” or whatever, because I am now flustered and trying to end the interaction before I screw it up.







