How to Deal with a Gratuitous Gloater
How to Deal with a Gratuitous Gloater
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Glassman

Original Poster:

24,262 posts

236 months

Saturday
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How do you respond to a gratuitous gloater? There seems to be a few of them around, like the guy who pulled up in his Pontiac in the car park I was replacing a windscreen for a customer. His car sounded awesome. He saw me glance at the car and said hello as he got out. I made a comment about how many miles his car didn't do, and his opening salvo was the capacity of the (modified) engine which was very quickly followed by a long-winded story about how much he'd paid not only for the car, but how much profit he made on another one he'd bought and sold before it. I guessed he might have lived alone. Tell me about the capabilities of the car, but I'm not really interested in how much you paid for it; it wasn't the topic of conversation!

Some time ago I went to a trade product launch and bumped into a few people I know. The usual pleasantries were exchanged but one of them, when loosely asked how things were, replied with quite a detailed summary on their monthly takings for that financial year. A simple 'business is good', 'surviving' or even a, 'you wouldn't believe it' would have sufficed. There's a part of me that sometimes wants to reply with, 'is that all?' to the 'we turned over x last month' but I would rather just look for the quickest escape from that conversation and swerve that person altogether.

A chap a few doors along the road from me recently took delivery of a new Q8. He was out the front one day as I walked to the station. I complimented the car on its colour and the response rapidly turned into, 'it was only five hundred and eighty a month'. Scrolling through What's New this morning I was reminded of this when I saw a comment along the lines of, 'they offered me the APP deal but I went for HP because even my cash accounts are making more than that'. Very powerfully-built-company-director-esque!

Then there are those who want to take any opportunity they can to brag about their salary, or how much bonus they've accrued.

It's mildly amusing at times and I sometimes hear Peter Serafinowicz's voice as the Intimidating Estate Agent in my head, "Did I arks you?".

How do you respond? Do you bait them, compete with them or try and chop them down? hehe






Quantum State

8,769 posts

301 months

Saturday
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How do I respond ? I don't because I really couldn't care less.

FredericRobinson

4,626 posts

253 months

Saturday
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Don't instigate conversations with people about their cars if you're not interested in the replies?

borcy

9,622 posts

77 months

Saturday
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Some people want others to tell them how great they are.

Its a risk you take if you engage random people in conversation.

g3org3y

22,007 posts

212 months

Saturday
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IME, the more insecure the individual, the bigger the (attempted) gloat.

Wills2

27,801 posts

196 months

Saturday
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Glassman said:
How do you respond to a gratuitous gloater? There seems to be a few of them around, like the guy who pulled up in his Pontiac in the car park I was replacing a windscreen for a customer. His car sounded awesome. He saw me glance at the car and said hello as he got out. I made a comment about how many miles his car didn't do,
Physician heal thyself.


Wacky Racer

40,439 posts

268 months

Saturday
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You'd better not bump into Donald Trump then in Tesco.

ClaphamGT3

11,968 posts

264 months

Saturday
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As Margaret Thatcher said; “being important is like being a lady; if you have to tell people you are, then you’re not”

Glassman

Original Poster:

24,262 posts

236 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Wills2 said:
Glassman said:
How do you respond to a gratuitous gloater? There seems to be a few of them around, like the guy who pulled up in his Pontiac in the car park I was replacing a windscreen for a customer. His car sounded awesome. He saw me glance at the car and said hello as he got out. I made a comment about how many miles his car didn't do,
Physician heal thyself.
It's taboo to comment on the fuel consumption of American muscle cars?

Wacky Racer

40,439 posts

268 months

Saturday
quotequote all
It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice. smokin

Countdown

46,762 posts

217 months

Saturday
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Glassman said:
How do you respond to a gratuitous gloater?

Smile, nod your head, move on. smile

Countdown

46,762 posts

217 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Glassman said:
Wills2 said:
Glassman said:
How do you respond to a gratuitous gloater? There seems to be a few of them around, like the guy who pulled up in his Pontiac in the car park I was replacing a windscreen for a customer. His car sounded awesome. He saw me glance at the car and said hello as he got out. I made a comment about how many miles his car didn't do,
Physician heal thyself.
It's taboo to comment on the fuel consumption of American muscle cars?
It could have been perceived as jealousy.

Glassman

Original Poster:

24,262 posts

236 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Countdown said:
Glassman said:
Wills2 said:
Glassman said:
How do you respond to a gratuitous gloater? There seems to be a few of them around, like the guy who pulled up in his Pontiac in the car park I was replacing a windscreen for a customer. His car sounded awesome. He saw me glance at the car and said hello as he got out. I made a comment about how many miles his car didn't do,
Physician heal thyself.
It's taboo to comment on the fuel consumption of American muscle cars?
It could have been perceived as jealousy.
A seven litre engined car pulls up and estimating that it doesn't do many miles to the gallon is jealousy. Okay.

Sporky

10,004 posts

85 months

Saturday
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I'd guess he was very familiar with both the fuel consumption and people commenting on it; perhaps his response was how he deals with people making the same comment he hears every time he gets out of his car.

But, on the original question, I don't feign interest if I'm not interested.

Terminator X

19,255 posts

225 months

Saturday
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I don't talk about the value of my cars and I'm always amused when other people tell me that about theirs as I never ask. To be ignored as others have said. I find that gloaters lack confidence so also tend to BS a lot.

TX.


GasEngineer

2,017 posts

83 months

Saturday
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Countdown said:
It could have been perceived as jealousy.

Envy.

Panamax

7,799 posts

55 months

Saturday
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It's not a big as mine, Paul.


fooman

1,014 posts

85 months

Saturday
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Sounds like clumsy attempts at small talk, does anyone talk to you about anything other than money or are those just the ones you focus on? A little chip on your shoulder perhaps? If I'm not interested I might just smile and nod, then get on with whatever I'm doing, no need to be rude.

fridaypassion

10,996 posts

249 months

Saturday
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I come across this from time to time its insecurity essentially. I had a customer who was at great pains to tell me about his 40k gold Rolex and how he was a property developer blah blah...then he had to arrange time off with his boss? How does that work then? Lived in an ex council semi which by the way there's nothing wrong with but why the need for the fake Rolex story? The Rolex flashers I've noticed generally are declining actually I often used to get people come in telling about their holiday home and flashing their rootbeer or Pepsi. Usually followed up with not being able to meet the asking price on a 20k car. The serious guys I think these days don't wear watches and are too busy for small talk about assets they may or may not have.

andrew-6xade

217 posts

24 months

Saturday
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It's usually just insecurity

There's a phrase about knowing the price of everything, but the value of nothing.