Hall's Rules of Social OrderCategory: Hall’s Rules of Social Order

Hall’s Rule of Social Order #71

25 October, 2010 (12:00) | Hall's Rules of Social Order

Don’t clap at the end of movies.  No matter how many people are clapping.

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Hall’s Rules of Social Order #255

18 October, 2010 (12:00) | Hall's Rules of Social Order

Placing blame is pointless and anti-progressive.  You’re living in and focusing on the past instead of moving forward.  If someone takes the blame, that’s productive, because it stops people from wanting to place blame. Move on, but learn from what has happened.

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Hall’s Rules of Social Order #58

11 October, 2010 (12:00) | Hall's Rules of Social Order

Do your best to avoid creating problems for yourself and your offspring.  IE: if you chose a name for them that is in any way entertaining, that’s setting them up to be taunted.  They’re name should be easy to pronounce correctly (phonetics works).  I knew someone named Parker Brothers, Chris Cross, and Secretia.  Those are […]

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Hall’s Rule of Social Order #57

4 October, 2010 (12:00) | Hall's Rules of Social Order

Although you have the right and freedom to express your ideas and ideals as you wish, you also need to respect the interpretation and misinterpretation of that from others.  IE:  You can name your kid after objects like “Blanket”, “Apple“, or even “Ocean”, but you’re going to seem a bit odd by social standards. Related: […]

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Hall’s Rules of Social Order # 257

27 September, 2010 (12:00) | Hall's Rules of Social Order

There should always be a point or objective to arguing. Arguing for the sake of arguing or even pure self entitlement is just silly and possibly destructive. If you can’t offer a potential resolution on your own, or if you can’t think of something the other side can offer to resolve the conflict, then you’re […]

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Hall’s Rules of Social Order # 147

20 September, 2010 (12:00) | Hall's Rules of Social Order

Nothing is universal. What works for you may not work for others. What’s also important here is to remember to think objectively and inversely. ie: What does not work for you, may work for others. An example of this would be the modern social networking tools out there. Just because you don’t use RSS feeds, […]

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