Songbird
She rules her life like a bird in flight
The voices in your head aren't your friends.
You're projecting.
And why can't your voices be my friends too?
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The voices in your head aren't your friends.
Because they're introverts. Duh.You're projecting.
Andn why can't your voices be my friends too?
Not so hard, but it can become difficult to make a large circle of friends because they don't know how to get close to you. That was my problem in high school. People liked me but I was so quiet, I never got very close to people (with some exceptions).
I listen though, and usually what I listen to coming out of the mouths of "extroverts" is pure verbal diarrhea. If I wanted to know how your kids were doing at work, why your football team is great this season or what you had for dinner last night I'd ask, the fact that I don't should tell you something. It doesn't though, and I figure it must be due to them having low self esteem, if they aren't the centre of attention/conversation then they feel unappreciated, or whatever, I don't know, I'm no psychologist.
From my POV, if you're spending your whole life spewing forth whatever trite thought enters your dilapidated brainspace, and craving the attention and approval of other people at every possible opportunity, you must have a very tiring and ultimately immensely unfulfilled time.
And some introverts wonder why some people think they're "snobs" or feel superior???
You're right that introverts and extroverts are different people and that each has a different need, and so on. But the difference is, at least introverts will leave you alone and won't bother you. So try as he may, he can never be as annoying as the extrovert (simply because the former is too quiet to do or say hurtful things in the first place).
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Here's a good, recent example of this whole concept. For several years my husband and I (both extroverts) have had season tickets to the high school games, and our seats are right beside another couple who I didn't know outside of these games. They're a very attractive couple and the wife is always dressed to the nines, perfectly coiffed and manicured and accessorized, in expensive jeans, elegant sandals or boots, and adorable shirts or vests, every lovely hair in place. In spite of sitting in very close proximity to them for years, they never seemed all that friendly. Not ONCE did they instigate a conversation, and when we said something friendly to them, their responses would be short and polite.
Well, that just got to me over time. My husband told me "yeah, I went to college with her. She was a Rangerette, and she's always been a snob."
So, that's how I had her categorized, and I was sure she was absolutely appalled by my behavior at the games - whooping and hollering and jumping up and down while she sat there beside me all prim and proper.
Last year, we put our house on the market FSBO. Well - she's a realtor, and she wanted to show some buyers our house, so when she called from the sign, I said sure, bring them over.
To make a long story short, eventually we allowed her to list our house. In spite of her lack of what we'd call "warmth," she was very professional, and she really impress us with her knowledge and diligence. But I still thought she was a snob.
Well, when we got an offer on our house, we had to find another one, and that meant getting in the car with her and looking at homes for hours. During that time, I finally got to know her.
Come to find out - why, she's not a snob at all! In fact, she's a beautiful person inside and out. She told me, after we knew each other better, that she is extremely self conscious, because she has a stutter! Now, I never had even noticed this, but apparently, she's worked very hard all her life to overcome this stutter. THAT'S why she doesn't just throw herself into conversations!
She also told me that she's always thought my husband is hilarious, and that she loves watching us go crazy at the games when our son plays well. Now - whether that's really true, I don't know, but what I've found as I've worked with her is that she is a very honest and sincere person.
Now, she is one of my favorite people in this town. Occasionally, because both of us have pretty high profile jobs in this small town, I will hear someone make a comment about how snobbish she is - and I am the first to jump to her defense.
I was very touched when she shared the story of her stutter to me. Here was this beautiful, poised and elegant, "aloof" woman, with tears in her eyes, telling me how much she admired my warmth and ease with others, because she had never felt that way a moment in her life.
Don't judge a book by it's cover.
Hmm ... there is a guy hurting you with words and actions, and another guy hurting you with his ... er, with his silence. Perhaps, that's the difference between an extrovert and an introvert.
You're right that introverts and extroverts are different people and that each has a different need, and so on. But the difference is, at least introverts will leave you alone and won't bother you. So try as he may, he can never be as annoying as the extrovert (simply because the former is too quiet to do or say hurtful things in the first place).
Not too many people call me "normal".Anne, you're probably just "normal" whatever that is.
I could see this happening ~ it makes a lot of sense.I knew that if I didn't assertively seek out friendships, I would just be alone - the new girl - the one no one ever really knew before she moved away again...
You're acting as if an extroverted person striking up a conversation with you in the grocery store line is somehow threatening you or being too aggressive somehow.
Did it ever occur to you that they may be genuinely interested in you, or really want to say something nice to you? "Hey, nice jacket. I love the color."
Did it ever occur to you that if a person smiles at you or says something nice, and you greet that friendliness with a sullen expression or silence, that your response may be just as hurtful as whatever it is that seems to be bothering you so much about their assertiveness?
There is nothing wrong with a person striking up a conversation. But do extroverts do merely that, or do they often cross the line?
If they were to say something nice, no one's gonna have a problem with that. So it must be something else. They're being too loud, too intrusive, too crude, all the while imagining that they're being nice and warm and friendly. Did that ever occur to you?
Nice twist, showing black as white and vice versa. If a person were nice, no one's gonna react with a sullen expression. So it must be something else: nosy isn't all that nice.