I do the door to door thing because it is a commandment you know Great Commission. The very least we just want to give people a small tract they'll throw on their coffee table. I know when to leave because you get this feeling of dread when someone doesn't want you there. You can feel their displeasure on you when you introduce yourselves to them.
Yeah, it's a rough job, as most selling jobs are.
But what makes your job more difficult is a certain hostility about the nature of your "product;" a hostility that doesn't exist if one's selling Fuller Brushes or Girl Scout cookies or Electrolux vaccuum cleaners.
I have my own religious faith, but anybody who comes to this door gets a chance to "sell" me something. I guess I should just say "I'm sorry, but I'm not interested," but I like giving people a chance. It's decent and civilized behavior, giving others a chance.
Of course, in my case, it's complicated by that one's trying to "sell" to a deaf person who has no idea what one's trying to sell, but excresence happens.
I don't even have a problem with Jehovah's Witnesses; I invite them inside, sit them down, offer them something to drink and nibble, and allow them to try out their spiel on me. But for some odd reason, members of that particular group, after about five or ten minutes, excuse themselves and leave.
I dunno. Maybe it's the large ornate gold-plated crucifix hanging above the thermostat; as you know, Protestants prefer crucifixes without the body of Christ on them, while Roman Catholics prefer the whole assembly. I always had the impression Jehovah's Witnesses don't like Catholics, but I never held it against them. Whatever rows one's boat, rocks one's chair, pushes one's buttons. It's all good.