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New question about conversation…
Hey Roosh,
I have really been putting into practice you’re use of conversational threads in PU that I’ve read in your book, Bang. I feel that very few PU schools teach the use of convo threads, and your use of threading and routines definitely provides insight that only more advanced PU schools talk about. It has helped me not to run out of things to say.
But I’m curious about your thoughts on how to have better stories in your game. I know that stories must convey your personality, it matters how you tell them more than what you say, BUT having interesting material talk about adds to the repertoire of your identity.
There are only so many bar and club stories that I can tell. And god forbid I’m not in a bar, but in a coffee shop or on the sidewalk, and I get passed the initial point of vibing with the girl. How do I add to my collection. Stories of adventure, mischief, fun, insight into a topics people don’t talk about? What if you don’t have the time or money to go globe trotting like you did for months at a time. This goes back to having various and more interesting experiences.
I’d appreciate any suggestions.
Answer:
Books. Short of experience, it’s the next best thing. It’s impossible for them not to give you ideas and topics to use in convesation, no matter how strange the book might be. For example I just read “The Jungle,” a 100-year-old book about the meatpacking industry, and sure enough it has come up in conversations with girls about food and eating meat in general.
I have the stories from my crazy family and day-to-day activities, my travel experience, my thoughts on the world, and things I’ve learned in books. Whether I’m really well-rounded or not, it comes across that I am, since I don’t focus on any one thing
Reading books sounds like an obvious or non-intuitive answer but keep in mind that 90% of people don’t bother reading anything besides magazines and blogs. A fun, cheap book to start with is “Mean Genes.”
With all the knowledge swimming in my head, I can talk to a wall for several hours without any difficulty, and that wall will find it interesting I’m sure. Bottom line: knowing interesting things will lead to interesting conversation.
Roosh is the author of Bang, a 60,000 word guide to getting laid that we review here. He recently contributed his First Date Survival Guide as part of the 31 Days To Better Game series.
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September 4, 2008
I recommend writing some of your life stories down as you think of them, too. It can help you come up with interesting angles and commit them to memory, so you’re more likely to think of them on the fly.
Upton Sinclair rocks, Roosh!
September 4, 2008
Def agree with Honey
keep a journal of some of your stories… you’d be surprised how much interesting stuff happens to you and the people you know.
Plus when you have it on paper… like Honey says, you can come up with interesting angles!
September 4, 2008
Honey and Bobby are right.
When you write down stories, your mind tends to remember them more, which is cool. That way, you don’t have to read a book full of new routines that may not be congruent with your identity. Your stories will be genuine and interesting (with some embellishment, if necessary)