The People Who Skip Small Talk Know Something We Don't

The People Who Skip Small Talk Know Something We Don't

Some people skip the weather and the weekend plans and go straight for something real. It's easy to call it a personality type. But there's a stranger explanation. They aren't braver or wired differently — they've just stopped believing the quiet lie the rest of us still tell ourselves: that other people don't want to go there. The truth turns out to be almost the opposite, and it changes what depth actually is.

Chapter 1

It's Not a Personality Type

Some people can talk about the weather for an hour. Others get restless in a minute — they want to know what keeps you up at night. It's easy to call that a personality type. Curious by nature, born that way. But what if it isn't? What if the people who go deep aren't braver or different at all — they've just stopped believing something the rest of us still quietly believe about what other people want?

It's Not a Personality Type

It's Not a Personality Type

Some people can talk about the weather for an hour. Others get restless within a minute. They want to know what keeps you up at night, what you're proud of, what you'd change.

I've been thinking about those second people. The ones who skip the small talk and go straight for something real.

It's easy to file them under a personality type. They're just deep people. Curious by nature. Good listeners. Born that way.

But I'm not sure that's the whole story.

The lists that describe these people always say the same things. They're curious. They reflect a lot. They notice small changes in how you're feeling. They listen instead of waiting for their turn.

All true. But notice what those traits have in common. Every one of them is something you can do, not something you are. You can ask one more question. You can wait a beat before speaking. You can notice.

Here's what made me stop. The people who go deep aren't braver than the rest of us. They've just stopped believing something most of us still believe — quietly, without ever saying it out loud.

The belief is this: other people don't really want to go there.

We assume the stranger is bored. We assume the coworker would rather keep it light. We assume that if we ask a real question, we'll make things awkward. So we stay shallow. Weather. Weekend plans. The show everyone's watching.

And it turns out we're wrong. Not a little wrong. A lot wrong.

Depth isn't a gift you're born with. It's a mistake you stop making.

That's a hopeful idea, if it's true. But it's also the kind of claim that sounds nice and falls apart when you check it. So let me actually check it.

References

Kardas, M., Kumar, A., & Epley, N. (2022). Overly shallow?: Miscalibrated expectations create a barrier to deeper conversation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 122(3), 367–398. https://doi.org/10.1037/pspa0000281

Depth is a habit, not a gift

More by Sulabh Rastogi

The Tally I Didn't Know I Was Keeping
Article

The Tally I Didn't Know I Was Keeping

Lucius Sulla had this carved on his tomb: no friend ever served me, no enemy ever wronged me, that I haven't repaid in full. He meant it as...

4 chapters·1 day ago
How to Find Out What You're Actually Good At, According to Peter Drucker
Article

How to Find Out What You're Actually Good At, According to Peter Drucker

Most of us think we know our strengths. We are usually wrong. In a quiet 1999 essay, Peter Drucker laid out a method so simple it sounds...

4 chapters·Jul 3, 2026
What Do You Want?
Article

What Do You Want?

Ask a woman who has spent her life on everyone else one small question. What do you want? She goes quiet. She smiles. She turns it back to...

6 chapters·Jun 23, 2026
A Man With No Friends
Article

A Man With No Friends

We see a man with no crew and assume something in him is broken. Often it's the opposite — he got tired of fake. But the comforting version...

5 chapters·Jun 20, 2026
Times Are Changing: People Are Starting to Talk to AI About Their Feelings
Article

Times Are Changing: People Are Starting to Talk to AI About Their Feelings

A 2026 study from JAMA Network Open followed 995 university students for 12 weeks. Some talked to an AI. Some went to group therapy. Some...

4 chapters·Jun 17, 2026
What Happens When AI Writes the Doctor's Notes? I Couldn't Stop Thinking About My Journal.
Article

What Happens When AI Writes the Doctor's Notes? I Couldn't Stop Thinking About My Journal.

An AI is in the room with the doctor now. It's listening, drafting the notes, and giving the doctor's eyes back to the patient. Half of...

4 chapters·Jun 13, 2026
Why People Write in Wartime
Article

Why People Write in Wartime

In the middle of an active war, with sirens going off and the power out, people sit down and write. Nearly 1,500 Ukrainians did it during...

4 chapters·Jun 11, 2026
Launching Hurroz
Article

Launching Hurroz

A founder's daily journal from the other side of shipping — what it actually feels like to build alongside AI, where the friction lives,...

2 chapters·May 8, 2026
The Things We Don't Say — Raw Confessions From India's Overworked Professionals
Article

The Things We Don't Say — Raw Confessions From India's Overworked Professionals

We say "main theek hoon" four times a day and mean it zero times. We stare at the ceiling at 2 AM replaying every mistake. We dread Sunday...

3 chapters·Apr 18, 2026