Hi all,
To me, compliments are like gifts. I don't wait for special occasions; I don't withhold one when I truly feel it; I stay within the bounds of propriety; I give them freely (the only ulterior motive is that the recipient know that I think or believe this or that about her and that she is pleased by this knowledge); I receive them gracefully (well, I try to, anyway); I turn them down when I feel they're inappropriate or insincere. Also, even though I
have caught myself doing this, I try never to go fishing for compliments. It makes others uncomfortable.
I don't compliment someone if I even suspect the only reason I do so is because that person needs an ego boost. I will usually tell a person that I think she's in need of a boost, and then--once my motivations are clear to both of us--proceed to point out positive things about herself she may have overlooked... a ricochet compliment, I guess.
I also try to be specific; "You look great" is okay but, then what? How is the recipient supposed to react to that particular compliment? She's left to figure out for herself what, exactly, triggered the compliment. Last week, I told a cashier in a restaurant that I thought she had beautiful nails (and did she ever!); she accepted the compliment with grace and gusto. She knew she had pretty nails and wasn't about to deflect anyone else's opinion on this. She let me examine her hands more closely, all the while giving me details on just how her nails came to be that way. When she asked me if I "worked with fingernails," I simply replied, "no, as a crossdresser, I'm an interested party." She burst out laughing; I just smiled.
What a compliment also does, is tell the recipient that you're paying attention to her, that you notice her, that she's visible to you, and that you care enough to let her know that. When a compliment is given in the same way as when we're asking someone how they are, without really caring about the answer, I opt out of the whole process. When I ask a person how he's doing, I genuinely want to know the answer. When I compliment someone, I want that person to know that what I say is a genuine response to something about her, her looks, her achievements, her personality, what have you.
I need to work on being able to accept compliments more gracefully, myself. Often, I get complimented on something I don't see as being anything special about me; however, that doesn't mean it's not special to the person complimenting me. Accepting a compliment is an acknowledgement, and an acceptance, of that person's views and attitudes.
Hey, maybe you good ladies can give me some practice here. Whoops! See, there I go again, fishing for compliments!
Love,
CJ