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Don’t Know What to Say? How to Always Know What to Talk About

Running out of things to say can make conversations feel awkward fast, especially when you want the connection to flow naturally. This guide breaks down how to always know what to talk about, keep conversations interesting, and avoid uncomfortable silences without sounding forced or rehearsed.

Stephen Shonibare
By Stephen Shonibare
1/1/1970
Don’t Know What to Say? How to Always Know What to Talk About

Few things feel more awkward than your mind suddenly going blank in the middle of a conversation. One second the vibe is flowing, the next second you’re staring at the chat thinking, “Okay… now what?”

The good news is this: interesting conversations are not built on having endless topics prepared in your head. They’re built on attention, curiosity, emotion, and knowing how to follow the moment naturally.

“Why do I always blank out during conversations?”

Usually because you’re trying too hard to perform.

The moment your brain starts asking:

  • “What should I say next?”
  • “Am I sounding boring?”
  • “What if this gets awkward?”

…your natural flow disappears.

A lot of socially confident people are not magically smarter or more charismatic. They’re just less trapped inside their own heads during conversations.

Stop searching for “perfect topics”

This is where many people get stuck.

They think good conversation comes from constantly introducing exciting new subjects. But most great conversations actually grow from ordinary moments handled well.

For example, if somebody says:
“I’m tired today.”

You don’t need to suddenly invent genius-level conversation.

You could simply say:

Lagos stress is fighting everybody equally this week 😭

Or:

You sound like somebody that deserves free shawarma after surviving today honestly.

Now the conversation has emotion, humour, and personality.

The easiest conversations come from paying attention properly

Most people are not really listening.

They’re waiting for their turn to speak.

But when you actually pay attention to small details, conversations naturally give you more material:

  • emotions
  • opinions
  • stories
  • memories
  • jokes
  • reactions

One tiny comment can open multiple directions if you notice it properly.

Struggling to make your opener feel natural?

Sabitok reads your situation and generates a playful, personalised question one that sounds like you, not a template. No cringe. No overthinking.

Ask questions that create stories, not one-word answers

Dry questions usually create dry energy.

Instead of:

  • “How was your day?”
  • “What do you do?”
  • “How are you?”

Try:

  • “What was the funniest part of your day?”
  • “What’s something you could talk about for hours?”
  • “What’s the most random thing that happened to you recently?”

These kinds of questions naturally create:

  • storytelling
  • personality
  • humour
  • emotional connection

If conversations constantly feel difficult for you, Sabitok’s conversation tools can help you find smoother ways to keep interactions flowing naturally.

Stop treating conversations like interviews

This changes everything.

A lot of awkward conversations happen because one person keeps asking endless questions without adding personality of their own.

Good conversations are a mix of:

  • curiosity
  • reactions
  • teasing
  • observations
  • opinions
  • shared experiences

For example:

Instead of:
“What music do you like?”

You could say:

You seem like somebody with aggressively specific music taste 😭

Now there’s room for banter instead of basic information exchange.

Use observations more often

Observations are one of the easiest ways to keep conversations alive.

Because instead of forcing topics, you react to what’s already happening.

For example:

Nigerian parents can detect enjoyment from three rooms away honestly.

Or:

People who say “I’m outside” while still bathing deserve investigation 😭

Relatable observations create instant connection because people emotionally recognise the experience.

You do not need to entertain constantly

This part matters.

Some people panic when conversations slow down, so they start forcing jokes, random topics, or excessive energy just to avoid silence.

Relax.

Good conversations breathe naturally sometimes. You are not a full-time content creator performing for engagement.

Often, calm confidence feels more attractive than trying too hard to keep attention.

Callbacks make conversations feel personal

One easy way to never run out of things to say is remembering details from earlier conversations.

If someone mentioned:

  • loving amala
  • hating mornings
  • bad cooking skills
  • obsession with reality TV

…you can bring those things back later.

For example:

I just saw somebody burn noodles and immediately thought of your cooking abilities 😭

Callbacks create inside jokes and familiarity, which makes conversations feel more natural and connected.

Sometimes the problem is chemistry, not skill

This is important.

Some conversations feel effortless because both people are contributing energy. Others feel draining because one person is carrying the entire interaction alone.

You should not constantly feel like:

  • a podcast host
  • customer support
  • an unpaid entertainer
  • a motivational speaker

Good chemistry creates flow naturally.

The real secret is curiosity

People who never run out of things to say are usually curious people.

They notice details.
They react emotionally.
They ask follow-up questions naturally.
They enjoy discovering how other people think.

That curiosity creates endless conversational material without needing memorised scripts.

And if you ever need help finding better conversation starters, smoother replies, or more engaging texting ideas, you can explore more real-life communication help through Sabitok’s dating conversation features. Sometimes one better message changes the whole energy.

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