You know, I think the Nazis used to shake hands... > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-kclug@marauder.illiana.net > [mailto:owner-kclug@marauder.illiana.net]On Behalf Of Marvin > GodfatherofSoul Bellamy > Sent: Friday, September 20, 2002 2:38 PM > To: Kclug > Subject: Re: Job Skills - was Re: Tech-support Hall of Shame > > > Socially, a hand or wrist injury is even worse than a marshmallow > handshake! The potential jokes you expose yourself to ;P > > Brian Densmore wrote: > > >I can accept the cultural greeting thing, but > >to seems to me you are being a bit anal on the > >handshake thing. To judge an entire interview on a > >handshake is, well pardon my French, inane [ok changed word]. > >Sorry if this insults, but sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. > >or handshake in this case. A bad handshake might be the > >result of injury to the hand. Judging a person's ability on > >a handshake is ludicrous. > > > > > > > >Sorry if I insult you. Just couldn't let it go. > > > >Brian > > > > > > > >>-----Original Message----- > >>From: Aaron [mailto:aaron@aarons.net] > >>Sent: Friday, September 20, 2002 10:29 AM > >>To: kclug@kclug.org > >>Subject: Re: Job Skills - was Re: Tech-support Hall of Shame > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >>>Hand shakes are just wierd... You have to leave your > >>> > >>> > >>personal space and > >>*lean* > >> > >> > >>>in to someone else's to make the connection. Not to mention > >>> > >>> > >>that you have > >>to > >> > >> > >>>ensure that you're standing exactly the length of each > >>> > >>> > >>other's arms when > >>you're > >> > >> > >>>ready to do the shake. And when do you do the shake? > >>> > >>> > >>Before, during, or > >>after > >> > >> > >>>the greeting? What if the other person doesn't shake? Then > >>> > >>> > >>you're left > >>standing > >> > >> > >>>there doing a James Dean brush of the hair. Too much work. > >>> > >>> > >>If you extend your hand and the other person doesn't shake > >>for no apparent > >>good reason (broken arm, no hand, etc) then you've been > >>insulted. The main > >>thing is that you extended your hand and those around you > >>will see you as > >>the better man for it. > >> > >> > >> > >>>If you're hiring someone, I hope you don't use the hand > >>> > >>> > >>shake as a good > >>first > >> > >> > >>>impression. Personally, I think there much more to be read > >>> > >>> > >>about a person > >>in > >> > >> > >>>whether or not they're able to make eye contact with you. > >>> > >>> > >>The hand shake is the first impression. It's the traditional > >>greeting in > >>our culture. You extend your hand, smile, look the other > >>person in the eyes > >>and introduce yourself. When I'm hiring someone, a bad > >>handshake means a > >>bad interview. > >> > >>If you think about it, it is kind of wierd that we grab > >>eachothers hands as > >>a greeting. Who knows where that hand's been? For all I > >>know the other > >>person could have just come from a vigrous butt picking > >>session, or worse. > >>But that's the way it is. > >> > >>Aaron > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >>majordomo@kclug.org > >> > >> > >> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >