"Nearly everyone who is asked, 'What is the proper response to a
compliment?' replies, 'Say 'thank you.'' But when actually offered a
compliment, only a third of people accept it so simply and smoothly,
found linguist Robert Herbert of Binghamton University.
"The
difficulty lies in the fact that a compliment ('What a nice sweater!')
has two levels: a gift component (accept or reject) and a content
component (agree or disagree). The addressee is confronted with a
dilemma--how to respond simultaneously to both: 'I must agree with the
speaker and thank him for the gift of a compliment while avoiding
self-praise.'
"Contrary to conventional wisdom, women aren't worse
than men at accepting compliments. It is the gender of the
compliment-giver that most influences the response. Women and men are
both more likely to accept a compliment coming from a man than from a
woman. When a man says, 'Nice scarf," a woman is more likely to respond
affirmatively. 'Thanks, my sister knitted it for me.'
"But when
one woman tells another, 'That's a beautiful sweater,' she is likely to
demur or deflect: 'It was on sale at Walmart, and they didn't even have
the color I wanted.' Such a response, intended to make the complimenter
feel that recipient isn't overly proud, only makes her feel awkward or
invalidated instead.
"Compliments can expose a wide range of
social ineptitude. Responses Herbert recorded include 'praise upgrades'
('Yes, it really brings out the blue in my eyes'), follow-up questions
('Do you really think so? Do you want to borrow it?') and disagreement
('it's itchy, I hate it'). Better to make a relevant, related comment
('Thanks, it's my favorite'). But nothing tops a smile, looking the
complimenter in the eye, and saying, 'Thank you.'" - Mary Loftus in Psychology Today March/April 2013
We can make others feel bad when they compliment us. Learning how to take a compliment can do wonders for our relationships.
www.The-Wind-Project.com
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