I could not disagree more. They’ve clearly gotten to know one another in a positive way and are clearly all enjoying themselves; what more could you really want from a group? Just because they’re enjoying something you wouldn’t enjoy doesn’t make it bad.
I mean, there’s very few people in that hall, so presumably they’re arriving before the lecture starts. Furthermore, if the lecturer (or whomever else) had a problem with it, presumably they would have put a stop to it during the two months depicted here.
The ability to use random nonsensical greetings shows how comfortable the members of the group are with each other by completely discarding formalities.
Not for nothing, I suspect that if that’s the group dynamics in groups you participate in, you need to work on finding better groups.
I could not disagree more. They’ve clearly gotten to know one another in a positive way and are clearly all enjoying themselves; what more could you really want from a group? Just because they’re enjoying something you wouldn’t enjoy doesn’t make it bad.
I think that the context here is important, a formal setting of a lecture, not the cafeteria or someone’s dorm room.
I mean, there’s very few people in that hall, so presumably they’re arriving before the lecture starts. Furthermore, if the lecturer (or whomever else) had a problem with it, presumably they would have put a stop to it during the two months depicted here.
If your friend group can’t greet each other by making random sounds, you need to work on finding better groups.
Honestly
Olololo, go brrrrr!
The ability to use random nonsensical greetings shows how comfortable the members of the group are with each other by completely discarding formalities.
WHERG WHERG WHERG