Vartika Jaiswal

Which of these phrases do you hate the most?

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Priscilla Tunnell
Me too) hate them all, they are weird
Igor Lanko
Oh man, English is not my mother tongue, I had no idea somebody may dislike phrases like “I hope you’re doing well...”. I genuinely used it to be friendly. I guess it makes sense if I think of something similar in Russian though! Thanks for bringing this up!)
Ryan Haber
@igorlanko that's not so bad. We used that long before the pandemic. To me, it just feels like a pretty American thing to say, like, "Hi, how are you?" where we care but don't actually want or expect a truthful response. 😂
Ali Rajool
Why are these important for you at all?
Vartika Jaiswal
@rajool Why not Ali?
These difficult/unusual/crazy times feels like it's the new way of asking "how's the weather". Where there's real concern, it's more likely posed as a question. As for the rest, they're weird lol especially ping me. It feels 10 years old, when Blackberries were popular.
Ryan Haber
They're all cliche, which I dislike, but can survive. Life is full of cliches. What I hate, hate, hate about "these difficult times" is the saccharine melodrama of it all.
Vartika Jaiswal
@ryan_haber1 I totally agree with your point that Life is full of cliches. The intention is good maybe, but not always genuine.
Henry Dobson
I hate them all. But get the ball rolling is BY far the most annoying, I don't know what about that phrase annoys me but it just makes me instantly want to delete the email.
Vartika Jaiswal
@henry_dobson I agree with you, I think these lines have become a blind spot and one tends to skim through it to move to the main topic of the email.
Andreea Bunica
how do I choose all of the above? and also, how have these phrases not made it to the LinkedIn automated messages yet?
George Pilpilidis
I use "Ping me" :O It is easy... what has the same meaning and is faster to type than ping me?
Robert B
can i check them all? xD
Jesse Jensen
The first one I believe is a nice way to be considerate since it IS a difficult time. Even if it may not be you or but it could be for them. By the way, I hope you are doing well in this difficult time as well as everyone else in this discussion. "Ping me?" Who says that? "Get the ball rolling." I googled this and the origin story is pretty cool: "The first origin story states that get the ball rolling is a sports term, taken from the game of croquet. Croquet came into existence in Britain in the mid-1850s, though a similar game named pall-mall had existed in France since the mid-1600s."
Vartika Jaiswal
@jessehojjensen I agree, the intention is good. I like to start emails with something similar i.e. "I hope you're having a great day", "Hopefully, everything's great in your world", et cetera. And thanks for the information about the origin of the "Get the ball rolling." Jesse.