There are moments in life that define your character.
Graduations.
Job interviews.
The time you tried to open a door that said “pull.”
And then there is the ultimate test of social survival:
Waving back at someone who wasn’t waving at you.
It happens fast.
Too fast.
One second you’re a normal human being.
The next, you are committed to a full-body gesture with absolutely no witnesses… except everyone.
Stage 1: The Misinterpretation
It starts innocently.
You see someone lift their hand.
Your brain, eager to participate in society, immediately decides:
“That is for me.”
No further investigation is performed.
Could they be scratching their head?
Adjusting their hair?
Trying to scare a fly?
Irrelevant.
You are now in wave mode.
Stage 2: The Wave Commitment
This is where things escalate.
You don’t just wave.
You invest in the wave.
A small, polite gesture becomes:
- full hand motion
- slight smile
- possibly eye contact
- emotional confidence
You are now socially locked in.
There is no undo button.
Stage 3: The Realization
It hits suddenly.
They were not waving.
They were:
- greeting someone behind you
- stretching
- or gesturing at literally anything else in the universe
But not you.
Never you.
Time slows down.
You become hyper-aware of your own hand.
It is still mid-air.
It has nowhere to go.
Stage 4: The Fake Recovery Attempt
Now you must improvise.
Option A:
Turn the wave into a hair adjustment
Suddenly your hand is very interested in your forehead.
Option B:
Pretend you were pointing at something behind them
You are now silently accusing a wall of importance.
Option C:
Continue walking like nothing happened
Confidence: fake
Dignity: under review
Stage 5: The Internal Replay Loop
For the next 6 hours, your brain replays the moment:
- Why did I wave so enthusiastically?
- Was that too friendly?
- Did I look desperate?
- Do they think I know them?
- Do I know them?
You don’t.
But now you are emotionally invested in a stranger’s opinion of your wave technique.
Stage 6: The Unexpected Possibility
Sometimes, worst case scenario:
They did see it.
They just chose not to respond.
Now you are stuck in a situation where:
- you waved
- they ignored it
- and you both know it happened
This is social purgatory.
Final Stage: Acceptance
Eventually, you come to terms with it.
Everyone has waved at nothing at least once.
It is a universal human experience.
A small, awkward reminder that:
- perception is fragile
- confidence is dangerous
- and hands sometimes move faster than logic
And somewhere out there…
another person is also wondering why they just enthusiastically greeted a lamp post.


