Spyke

Same, even my young kids if I ask them a yes/no question while they're eating to avoid talking with their mouth full.

8
leminal.space

I feel like this is a you thing. I bet if you started doing it around people others would start doing it without realizing.

28
paulzyreply
lemmy.world

That might be true, or something local. I posted that this morning then got too busy to check in. I probably should have made it less about “positive/negative” and more about “it’s cool vs not cool” Here is my way too late OP explanation:

I go to a lot of sports events, hockey mostly. Since the 90s my friends and I play a little game. Count the people who give a #1 finger on the jumbotron vs point at their jersey vs thumbs up. Collectively, we have decided that ”kids today” don’t use thumbs up as much as in the past. I also noticed “Let’s go!” Is the cheer these days.

Sorry for oversimplifying my shower thought.

6

All good. I made a similar extrapolation the other day about pudding not seeming as popular because I wasn't seeing people eating it or it advertised but after voicing my thoughts to a coworker I realized I'm probably just not anywhere near the target market. I'm not a sugar crazed child watching children's TV networks and nor do I have kids myself.

2
fedia.io

OP, where do you live? I get thumbs up all the time. Sometimes as a greeting, sometimes as an encouragement (e.g. during a run), sometimes even as a means of communication in traffic.

15

Western Canada. I was thinking maybe it’s like a soda vs pop thing. Or just wildly isolated to my own experience. Just showerthinking.

1

I give thumbs up all the time. Usually two of them at the same time with a forced smile to let people know I wanna turn into oncoming traffic every day.

12

I use it IRL and have used the emoji I think once. So egg on your face, you fucking rube! You've never been more wrong bucko!

12

That's very anecdotal, do you know any studies that investigate thumbs up prevalence IRL and online?

8
Zorquereply
lemmy.world

That depends, is it a revolver or a semi-auto?

5
HikingVetreply
lemmy.ca

Double action revolvers are semi auto.

Some mag fed pistols have external hammers.

1
Zorquereply
lemmy.world

Honestly, I know fuck-all about guns. I just thought I'd make a funny 😓

1
lemm.ee

Yeah I do, I just use the wrong thumb most times.

5

I do it constantly, also the 🤙 and the shocker depending on the vibes.

5

I'm still using it as an "I got it" hand gesture; if i'm in the middle of some work and someone approaches me to tell me something while i'm busy.

4
mander.xyz

Guess this should be on unpopular opinion since everyone in the comments is disputing OP

4

I used it three times this morning at the dentist because I couldn't talk. Also use it regularly at work to convey agreement. See others use it fairly often too.

4

I love using thumbs up ironically. Like is someone trying to ask for an explanation to why i don't sit down to shit? 👍

0
lemmy.dbzer0.com

*I love using thumbs up in a way that invokes absurdist situational irony by laying out an absurd situation that the other person expects an explanation for, but instead receives a friendly affirmation in the form of the thumbs up emoji, which exemplifies situational irony by subverting the other person's expectations of what the situation is actually about.

1
lemmy.world

The thumbs up emoji is hated now and viewed as passive aggressive compliance.

So, I definitely thumbs up more often IRL.

-11
Rhynoplazreply
lemmy.world

This is what my wife and kids have told me. 🤷🏻‍♂️

-3

Maybe where you live, but not for me. Thumbs up emoji just means okay / will do / message received, in Colorado at least

9
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I use a thumbs up reaction as "I acknowledge I've read and understood this, but don't think you require a push notification" so I guess your mileage may vary

6
HikingVetreply
lemmy.ca

What hare brained social group do you participate in?

3