Indifference
What’s wrong with an ambiguous answer? Not everything in life requires scientific or mathematical proof.
If Danielle (or a woman in the future) asks me, “What would you like to do, today?” Should I really have a detailed plan at the ready?
Of course I have some idea when it comes to work, but from a personal viewpoint, I am often happy to see where a day takes me.
If I answer the above question with, “I don’t mind,” it is because I genuinely, “don’t mind.”
It does not mean any of the following -
“I don’t care.”
“Shall we go to bed for an hour?”
“You decide because I can’t be bothered.”
“Shall we go to bed for a couple of hours?”
“I’d like to watch the Grand Prix but I don’t want to say it because I know that you will get angry if I sit indoors on a sunny day watching TV.”
“Shall we go to bed for the afternoon?”
“Why don’t you go in to town with Hannah, and I’ll stay here and spend some time on the PC.”
OK, sometimes it might mean the above, but not always.