Reminds me a lot of a trip I took with my Dad and Stepmom around the big island 
of Hawaii. I would hear her say something that barely registered with me, but 
my Dad seemed to immediately act upon it. After watching this interaction for a 
bit, I realized she was speaking in a kind of code, and he was interpreting it, 
and doing a damd good job of it too, although she would probably have disagreed 
about that. 

I brought it up to him later, and he confirmed that this was exactly what was 
going on. He had learned to do this over the years he had been with her. She 
would make vague references to things, and it was his responsibility to 
interpret correctly that she wanted him to do or say something very specific. 
And he’d better get it right too, or there would be words later, and the words 
would be more code he had to interpret correctly, or else things would just go 
downhill from there. 

I expressed that this was really difficult for me as it left so much room for 
misunderstandings, and the stress of always having to be on my guard about 
those little subtleties would be too much for me to deal with on a daily basis. 
He told me that I had better never marry then. I’ve taken his advice. :-)

Bob


On Feb 25, 2014, at 14:13 , Mark Wieder <mwie...@ahsoftware.net> wrote:

> Some cross-cultural issues:
> 
> <http://blogs.hbr.org/2014/02/how-to-say-this-is-crap-in-different-cultures/>
> 
> -- 
> Mark Wieder
> ahsoftw...@gmail.com
> 
> 
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