I'm an introvert, but I am one of those people who does not say "good" or "fine" if I am not actually doing good or fine. To me, it feels dishonest. I don't like lying to people without having an actual important reason to do so. Sometimes, I will just choose to treat the question as a greeting rather than as an actual question, but when I do that, I respond with a real greeting like "hello" instead of responding with a fictional answer to the non-question.
It would make more sense to me to prohibit employers from testing for it, rather than allowing the test and prohibiting the use of those test results as a basis for the decision not to hire someone. I think trying to legislate the reasons why people make decisions is a bad idea.
I would have asked people how many miles away the closest casino is located. The only reason I ever go to a casino is because there is one less than 10 miles away from my house. If I had to drive any significant distance to get to one, I wouldn't.
ShawnParksPost t1_jeducqe wrote
Reply to Actually relatable by Certain-Row-4280
I'm an introvert, but I am one of those people who does not say "good" or "fine" if I am not actually doing good or fine. To me, it feels dishonest. I don't like lying to people without having an actual important reason to do so. Sometimes, I will just choose to treat the question as a greeting rather than as an actual question, but when I do that, I respond with a real greeting like "hello" instead of responding with a fictional answer to the non-question.