- Put yourself in their shoes
- Think of times you’ve been in a similar situation and explain your reaction
- Can the behavior be explained by a more “universal” model than a person-specific one?
- How are they empathizing with you, given they are projecting?
- How are they empathizing with you, given what you know about how they perceive others?
- What successful model have you used to explain similar behavior for similar people?
- Is your conclusion affected by your attitude towards the subject?
Um, perhaps? It's pretty clear that Alice is putting Bob in a no-win situation. If he gives her space, then he doesn't care; if he tries to ask her what's wrong, he's clueless (or dominating the conversation).
Indeed, under your interpretation Alice saying "nothing is wrong" rather than "let's not talk about it now" is an out-and-out lie. It's not clear that Bob inferring that Alice is repeatedly lying would reflect better on Bob.
If Alice said "let's talk about it later" and then Bob insisted that this get hashed out now, then you would have a point. But as is this example doesn't reflect poorly on Bob.
Alice is not "lying". You cannot reduce human communication in these circumstances to the explicit meaning of words. When someone says "nothing is wrong" when everyone involved realizes something is wrong then their intent is not to deceive.
Why doesn't Alice just say "lets talk about it later"? There are plenty of plausible reasons-- she may not know if she wants to talk about it later, she may not want to get into a fight about when they talk about it, she may want Bob to figure it out for himself, she may expect some kind o... (read more)