Shy And Retiring Types Have Their Day
Ahh, January, the time for introverts to breathe a sigh of
relief. We can come out of hiding; it's safe to answer the phone and to stop
pretending we're under the weather.
Yes, from mid-December through to New Years Day, those of
us with an introverted nature live in a state of perpetual dread. The weeks of
office parties, neighbourhood drinks and open houses drain all of our energy.
But now we can relax, we made it through.
I speak from experience. My name is John and I am an
introvert. It surprises most people because I'm outgoing and friendly and, in
fact, very far from shy, but I prefer one person and one conversation at a
time.
I fought this for years, always trying to be someone else.
I made myself go to parties; I tried to fix what I thought was
"wrong" with me. But I finally got it. This is one of the blessings of maturity, a wisdom that
brings a "What you see is what you get" self acceptance or perhaps for
introverts it's, "Who you don't see is what you get."
But it's no wonder that we introverts are sometimes
defensive, up to 75% of the population are considered extroverted. Western culture
tends to reward extroversion, while being distainful and suspicious of
reflection and solitude.I've learnt to spot my like-minded peers, though. We're
the ones walking toward a house party saying: "How long do we have to
stay?"
Introverts crave meaning, so party chitchat feels like
sandpaper to our psyche. Here's what introverts are not: We're not afraid, and
we're not shy. We're just focused and we prefer one-on-one because we like to
listen and we want to follow an idea all the way through to another interesting
idea. That's why small talk annoys us. So does pretending to be happy or
excited or anything that we're not.
Introverts are constantly swimming against the tide.
Introverts are hounded to "be more outgoing" and tortured with
invitations that begin, "Why don't we all..." No thanks, we don't
want to do anything that involves "we" or "all"; we prefer
to visit you, just you, not a dozen other people.
Is that the rain again? Darn, I'll have to stay home.