Most SkSp members don't like to introduce themselves. It might be more fun to have people say a quick word about the person sitting next to them. On Jan 22, 2014 11:42 AM, "Kevin" <m...@iamkevin.ca> wrote:
> On Wed, 22 Jan 2014 09:27:40 -0800 > Ron <r...@skullsecurity.net> wrote: > > > > > That being said, I feel like it would be worthwhile to try it for a few > > meetings, and see how it goes. I get nothing but eye rolling for > > spending 30 seconds on getting people to introduce themselves, I can't > > imagine how the group will feel about actually reading through the > > previous meeting's minutes. And if it winds up being an eye-rolling > > thing that nobody wants, and it's in the bylaws, we're outta luck. > > > > So to that regard, am I the rare individual who instead didn't roll > his eyes, but wrote a novel? I do find it easier to introduce oneself > over written medium than it is acoustically. Perhaps others feel the > same. I do believe introductions are good and everyone should have > one, as it helps the group better assess that individual and their > overall talents they can bring into the group. One of my talents is > "Run-on-sentences", not sure if I can fit that in anywhere, but I'll > try. > > -- > Kevin <m...@iamkevin.ca> > _______________________________________________ > SkullSpace Discuss Mailing List > Help: http://www.skullspace.ca/wiki/index.php/Mailing_List#Discuss > Archive: https://groups.google.com/group/skullspace-discuss-archive/ >
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