Introvert to extrovert

AlienGeranium

Well-known member
Not completely because an extrovert actually derives PLEASURE from being around and engaging with people. An introvert may be able to get to a neutral feeling around people but if the pleasure isn't there then they aren't really an extrovert.


As I understand it, extroversion and introversion are about what energies or drains us, not about where we derive pleasure. So you can be an introvert who loves interacting with people and can do so comfortably, just after a while it tires you out and you need a break. And you can be an extrovert who is uncomfortable and nervous around people, or even suffering from SA, in which case being around and engaging with people may not always be that enjoyable.
 

S_Spartan

Well-known member
As I understand it, extroversion and introversion are about what energies or drains us, not about where we derive pleasure. So you can be an introvert who loves interacting with people and can do so comfortably, just after a while it tires you out and you need a break. And you can be an extrovert who is uncomfortable and nervous around people, or even suffering from SA, in which case being around and engaging with people may not always be that enjoyable.


Well isn't deriving energy from an activity mostly a pleasurable experience?

In my mind:
Extrovert=sees other people as a source
Introvert=sees other people as a drain

With all of us being somewhere on the spectrum between the two extremes.
 

AlienGeranium

Well-known member
Well isn't deriving energy from an activity mostly a pleasurable experience?

In my mind:
Extrovert=sees other people as a source
Introvert=sees other people as a drain

With all of us being somewhere on the spectrum between the two extremes.

Well, I guess I'd think of it as similar to say, playing a sport. Most people who play find it fun and enjoyable, despite the fact that it drains their energy and they eventually need to stop and recharge. I think an introvert can see social interaction for a source of a lot of different things, even if one is not energy.
 

sorrow1

Well-known member
I think like a lot of things its not a question of one or the other its a spectrum to varying degrees, some people might need less or more alone time than others and some people need to be around others more. But I also think this can fluctuate slightly throughout your lifetime.

In my previous experiences I have found so******ing stressful and unfulfilling especially when I have been sat silent as part of an animated conversation between others and I have been worrying about what I am going to say and not really being interested in what is being discussed and worried about being mocked. I would all the time find myself craving to be alone . I would feel so drained afterwards from all the worry and couldn't wait to get home so I could relax (recharge) and do activities I had an interest in, by myself.

I would sometimes take holidays off work to get away from the stress of being social at work. I would not tell anyone outside of work I was off and just spend the day alone and then pretend when I got back to my work colleagues I had done something cool. That's how extreme my "introversion" was at times.

Lately though and looking back on it building up over the last couple of years or so I have become more confident socially and found a group of friends I am more comfortable around, share similar interests with and at the moment I have a girlfriend that I have become comfortable around as well.

I find myself now still sometimes craving my alone time but its becoming fewer and farer between as I now seem to find myself easily bored when I am alone and the solitary activities I once craved and loved so much like tv, books and gaming are now often unfulfilling to me, They quickly bore me and I find myself wanting to be out doing stuff with my friends or spending time with my girlfriend more often than before.

I believe it is true that you can get a confident or unconfident Introvert and the same polar extremes for an extroverted person but for me my need for solitude to recharge and need for companionship for fulfilment has tipped on the scale solely due to my situation and control over my anxieties.

I would say that I have gone from an unconfident introvert sliding to a more confident extrovert in recent years.
 

CrazyGirl

Well-known member
Yes. I'v done it (actually I kind of just FAKED it)...but it wasnt very well received so now im "back at the drawing board" so to speak.

Key word there is "faked." You may be an introvert or an extrovert naturally, but here it seems you mean you faked social confidence and couldn't sustain it for long, so you gave up (I've done the same).

I've faked it as well. People seem to see through that fakeness and didn't help me at all at being confident
 
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