crumpets
Posts: 1614
Joined: 11/5/2014 From: South Bay (SF & Silicon Valley) Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: NookieNotes Sounds like you prefer someone who enjoys behavior modification. I hadn't thought of it in those words, but, thinking about what you said, and what I enjoy, I would think you are correct in that assumption (even though I hadn't myself realized that's what I might have been saying). quote:
ORIGINAL: NookieNotes It's a skill, and works very well with someone who loves direction I do so very much love to learn exactly how She (whomever she may be) wants things done, so, yes, I would say that this "Behavior Modification" thing would work well with me (if that's what it is). quote:
ORIGINAL: NookieNotes It's also a way to "teach you" to anticipate in the right directions. Because you will begin to think in the right directions through training and repetition. Interesting point. I think what you're saying is that She would be able to, over time, train my myriad ad-hoc adjustments and inventive improvements in a certain channel, where she defines that channel, over time, via the corrections she applies. Given I'm always adding improvements to every process, is that what you are you intimating seems to be the pleasure-improvement dynamic that would work out well? quote:
ORIGINAL: NookieNotes But, you'd have to play along. Thus, the thought exercise. *smiles* Yes. I love to play along, and I love to improve every process, which, for some people, might not work - but - for those who like things done a certain way - where the service just gets better and better and more honed to her liking and needs over time - that seems to be the process toward service perfection. [Continuing the thought experiment ...] I wonder how long it would take before the service is so perfect, that it can't be any further improved upon? What I mean by that is that is she'd repeatedly order a certain service, where I'd apply myriad improvements over time in supplying that service, where there would inevitable corrections, and just-as-inevitable improvements, until (as time goes on), we can presume the point of perfection has been achieved. What then? At that point, would applying still more attempts at improvements only diminish the quality of the service? (i.e., When we get to the stage where my attempts at improvement only result in her corrections, is that when the point of service perfection has finally been achieved?) Or is the perfection point never achieved?
|