Things Fake People Do
1. Smile all the time.
What is it about people who constantly smile — even when it’s way
past the point of appropriate — that is so terrifying? Smiles usually
elicit such a warm, calming response in other human beings. Unless, that
is, the person smiling has had this
Real Housewives-esque
serial killer grin plastered on their face through every social
encounter that day, including ones where they are unhappy or clearly
dislike the people they’re surrounded by. The need to constantly present
an “everything is awesome, this is great, as long as I keep smiling you
can’t say anything” kind of attitude is one that says, on some level,
“I have no idea how to actually interact with other humans.” We all know
that person who, even if they practically have a mouth covered in blood
from verbally ripping someone apart the second their back was turned,
is going to greet you with a bright Stepford smile and a squeaky
“Hiiii-eee!” That person is no fun to be around.
2. Give backhanded compliments.
“Oh my god, I love your apartment! It’s so little and cute!”
“That dress looks so good on you… very flattering in the stomach area.”
“This food is delicious, did you get it catered?”
What is better than starting off any social gathering with a nice,
warm backhanded compliment smushed all over your face like a giant
handful of mud? Nothing! That’s what fake people are there for, to tell
you that, no matter how well you’re doing, you could always be doing
better. (Or, as is often the case,
they are doing better
themselves.) It’s the kind of compliment you often expect to hear from
your mother, or someone else who claims to have your best interests in
mind but really just has their own well-drawn vision of exactly what
your life should look like, and vocal disappointment about how it’s not
looking that way. Fake people are always the first to — while keeping
that crazy, plastered-on smile — remind you of your place in the world.
3. Be extremely passive-aggressive.
What’s wrong with that fake person? Oh,
nothing. They’re
fine.
Don’t worry about them. They don’t have a single care in the world,
they’re just going to make you tear and pry at their psyche like an
archaeologist trying to get a sarcophagus open until they finally
halfway-tell you what is actually wrong. Essentially, with fake people,
nothing is actually what it seems, and everything that they say is going
to have to be matched up with that secret decoder ring you got in a box
of Froot Loops that one time. You’ll never really know what they’re
thinking, or why they did something, and direct confrontation of the
issue only makes them retreat further back into their shell. Their hard,
lacquered tortoise shell of guarded feelings. Fake people are turtles.
4. Talking behind everyone’s backs.
The thing about gossip is, no matter how much you enjoy it in the
moment (and we all kind of have our ugly moments of saying something
nasty about someone that we wouldn’t say to their faces), you know it is
probably happening behind your back, too. Sure, you can laugh with a
particularly catty friend or acquaintance about that one girl whose dye
job schedule is always in tragic misalignment with the rate at which her
roots grow in, but what do you think that same person is going to be
saying about your inability to match patterns the second you’ve walked
out of the room? Gossip is a kind of poison that, the more we allow it
to seep in our veins, the harder it is to completely get rid of. We like
to pretend that only a certain class of Regina George Horrible People
talk behind people’s backs — and certainly some do it more than others,
that’s true — but in that department, it’s hard to find someone who
never engages in fake person behavior. Oh, well. We’re probably all just
getting laughed at for our awkward snort-laugh when our back is turned,
just like we deserve.
5. Make you feel like crap.
I think the most significant marker of a fake person has to be their
uncanny ability to make you feel like an utter loser in their presence.
Whether its the constant guarding of their actual feelings, the tendency
to make snide comments about everyone around them, or the general
“omgurtotallymybestfriend” smile they give to each new person they
encounter, it’s a recipe for self-esteem disaster. There’s nothing worse
than hanging out with someone with whom you’re never sure of where you
stand, and frankly aren’t even sure they consider you a friend in
return. That’s the thing about fake people — you can never tell how much
of their relationships are based on actual mutual interest and respect,
versus how much is just for appearances or social climbing. Maybe
they’re your friend, or maybe you’re just for networking purposes. When
you go home at the end of the day, you should feel like the interactions
you had with people were genuine, and that the emotional investments
you make with friends — or even friendly acquaintances — is something
worth making. Because if we let ourselves get caught up in the game of
“let’s all be nice and smile and compliment and then be terrible behind
each other’s backs,” pretty soon, we’re going to be fake people
ourselves.
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