No, You Are Not An Introvert

in #anthropology7 years ago (edited)


source: Huffington Post

Being an Introvert or an Extrovert has to do with age, time and place and not about some intrinsic quality about ourselves. Our ass being glued on a chair, playing games days on end does not suggest introversion. Finding ourselves in college and being more outgoing in parties does not suggest extroversion. Situations enable a cocktail of behaviors, not the other way around.

No single person is either an introvert or an extrovert. No one can safely assume how much extroversion or introversion is adequate to safely label someone as such. Psychology, much like with everything else it mumbles about, assumes that the "average" behavior is the "normal" one. This hypothesis is erroneous. What is "average" when it comes to something as complex and dynamic as human behavior, is a statistical illusion. No single person exists in that spectrum. The entire narrative of introversion/extroversion is based on an abstract idea that has no basis to reality nor can it be scientifically falsified.

Technology, much like culture, has molded our behavior in ways we can hardly fathom. When we barricade ourselves and play games in front of the computer while chatting away in a group, we are still sociable. In other words, based on the proponents of this over-simplistic archaic theory, we are being extroverted while being introverted. It is nonsensical.

Chatting online is yet another form of communication. Conservative critics might argue that it is not a "genuine" one. This is though an emotional response, not an analytical evaluation. Even so, if one dares to delve into that spectrum, all forms of communication can subjectively have negative and positive aspects. None is truly authentic or valid. In much the same way, speaking on the telephone, texting or mailing letters still counts as an equally valid form of communicating. Communication, much like language, evolves. We cannot restrict ourselves into past definitions of communication in order to define our roles of introversion and extroversion. This is not only unscientific but also intellectually dishonest. Imagine for example early homosapiens that used mostly vowel based languages judging a modern culture for "spoiling" it with "too many" consonants.

The jungian narrative suggests that introverts get their energy from within themselves while extroverts get it from those around them. This is a false assumption since we are all social animals that need each other to survive. No matter who you are, you still need other human beings to get motivated. You might not have to talk or interact with them as much but surely you will use their tools and accomplishments (such as software and hardware) in order to give meaning to your own life. Your energy, whatever than means, still comes from others around you.

People like to pride themselves nowadays for being introverts — meaning that they are closed to themselves. Apparently this brings a level of self loathing into play since more and more people claim that nobody understands them. We forget that being misunderstood is rather something inevitable in a world that is governed by technology. Our devices redefine the way we communicate. Before the internet people used to get more or less the same kind of information and thus it was easier to relate to each other. Today, we are all using multiple sources of webbed information. Their combination creates extremely unique individuals that do not abide to generic forms or identity such as those who were previously palpated by religion, culture and politics. Evidently everyone feels more alienated. This is merely the result for being an individual.


There is no need to label onself with the epithet of introversion for such an act degrades the individual into a repackaged pop-psychology meme. We all need to belong somewhere and strive to define ourselves, but choosing such epithets is not the way to go. Admittedly, it is challenging to live in the communication revolution and we all might be a little confused. Even so, this should motivate us to be more vigilant with how we are defined rather than being so easily labeled.











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I strongly disagree, it's like you are arguing that there is not a "distinction" in humans in "fast running" ones and "slow running" ones and you claim that we are all "the same". We are not the same, we all have different attributes and while for some of us "running" is a much easier activity, for others it can be quite laborious. And I'm not just talking about "fitness" levels here.

For example...
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23201182

...we have explored circulating cholesterol and triacylglycerol concentrations, which appear to be decreased in hyperbilirubinemic individuals/animals,and are accompanied by lower body mass index in highly powered studies. These results suggest that bilirubin could be responsible for the development of a lean and hypolipidemic state in GS

Find an Extrovert (on the extreme side) and tell him to STFU for a whole day and see how this will work out!

[EDIT}
Upvoting for visibility

Very good rebuttal. I'd add to it that there seem to be two main misconceptions at play here too:

No matter who you are, you still need other human beings to get motivated

What does it really mean to be introverted? If your introvert/extrovert classification is lynch-pinning on motivation, how does that apply to individuals that just aren't very motivated to begin with?

More importantly though, introversion/extroversion is most likely a gradient (kind of like gender). Most people don't 100% fit in a nice pigeonhole of a label, but for succinct communications labels are very useful and efficient. That is to say, a 60/40 and 90/10 (introvert/extrovert respectively) are both "introverts" but would most likely have observable differences in social behavior. In fact, the spectrum itself is basically describing behavior.

Though, to that end of behavioral assessment there is definitely some re-evaluation needed for our criteria of what is a "genuine" social encounter.

I agree with chryspano. Also people wth a higher I.Q tend to be an introvert because they're thinking about something intelligent to say and are afraid of talking nonesense; lower I.Q people just talk of the game or the tv show thay saw yesterday and budge in any argument screaming their opinion with no second thought.
Most of these factors are genetic and can't be changed .

I.Q is bullshit to begin with . Also, if you are thinking to say something intelligent, then you are not so intelligent to begin with.

Even playing Chess is bullshit. Just move your pieces randomly and you'll beat Garry Kasparov, because being a chess grandmaster is just a social construct and we are all the same. Yea, sure :)

this is again irrelevant. playing chess requires training in a specific subject. Being an introvert does not require training.

you need to upgrade your arguments

haha. This is so good! mud slinging at its best. Why care so much about IQ or some arbitrary number so we can compare amongst ourselves?

Geez.

I.Q is bullshit

Not entirely, we somewhat know what to expect from someone with 70 100 130 or 160IQ

IQ is not bullshit at all. It is the best way we have to make a generalization of our capabilities. Lower IQ is even associated with lower impulse control and violence. Very high IQ is also associated with certain negative traits.

A person who scores 80 on an IQ test will NEVER be able to take a doctors degree. A person with 60 IQ will never be able to do manual labour without proper supervision.

IQ is probably the single most important tool we could use to improve everyone's lives. But it is so personal and "cold". It's so much shame connected to it, because it basically says; "You have an IQ of 80 and you can't become this and this and that" But rationally speaking it would be better for that person if he would accept that. My IQ is somewhere between 115-120. Which means I shouldn't go for certain things. I wouldn't be a great engineer. I probably couldn't get through a phd in maths or physics. My IQ has many limitations. I'm not incredibly bright. I'm a about a standard deviation above average. I understand some things, but there are tons of smarter people than me who look at me like a simpleton. And someone with an IQ of 80 is a simpleton to me. And someone with an IQ of 50 is a simpleton to them.

What's there to be so scared of?

Research on IQ is very well documented. But because of "hurt feelings" on behalf of others no one really pays any attention to it. It's a big mistake in my opinion.

No you can't because, yet again, is all about training and cultural relevance.

I debunk the whole thing with scientific studies here

https://steemit.com/intelligence/@kyriacos/iq-and-eq-cannot-measure-intelligence

according to the definition for intelligence on google intelligence is "the ability to acquire and apply knowledge and skills." the ability to acquire skills is what IQ tests do though the use of Logic puzzles that anyone can do, that require no training. It's tests you on your ability to solve problems its culturally relevant because its a good way to measure the ability of people to figure shit out. and if people can do better on the tests with training then they can train themselves to be more intelligent

I think your problem is that everyone else is talking about this definition of intelligence, and I think that you mean something different when you say intelligence. You really need to define your terms if you want to have any kind of constructive dialogue otherwise everyone is just arguing past one another.

the ability to acquire skills is what IQ tests do though the use of Logic puzzles that anyone can do, that require no training.

if you can train and improve on them then they do aggregate training. I.Q tests are based on the western model of understanding the world. This is why most African countries have very low marks. This is why most indigenous people don't do good on them. Take any high I.Q person in such a country and they will starve to death because the environment requires different kind of intelligence.

and if people can do better on the tests with training then they can train themselves to be more intelligent

actually not. if they stop training the I.Q falls back. in other words, intelligence is nothing but gaining expertise on a specific way of thinking.

let me guess your I.Q. score didn't come back very positive, did it.

Let me guess. You have no idea how to argue the subject and resort to strawman fallacies.

FYI: 136

I strongly disagree, it's like you are arguing that there is not a "distinction" in humans in "fast running" ones and "slow running" ones

false dichotomy and wrong example.

and you claim that we are all "the same".

We are not but we don't have to fall into a false dichotomy either

We are not the same, we all have different attributes and while for some of us "running" is a much easier activity, for others it can be quite laborious. And I'm not just talking about "fitness" levels here.

again, wrong example. I could say some people have black skin and some white and still be using a wrong example.

For example...
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23201182
...we have explored circulating cholesterol and triacylglycerol concentrations, which appear to be decreased in hyperbilirubinemic individuals/animals,and are accompanied by lower body mass index in highly powered studies. These results suggest that bilirubin could be responsible for the development of a lean and hypolipidemic state in GS
Find an Extrovert (on the extreme side) and tell him to STFU for a whole day and see how this will work out!

This is a scientific study about something completely different. The study can be falsified and replicated. Introversion/Extroversion is hearsay and opinions which can change in a person's life style depending on the situation.

Find an Extrovert (on the extreme side) and tell him to STFU for a whole day and see how this will work out!

I can find an "extrovert" and examine their responses when they are 15 and when they are 45. When they are in college and when they meet their first true love.

again. situations matter. these are not intrinsic values.

again, wrong example. I could say some people have black skin and some white and still be using a wrong example.

My example is not wrong, the one about the skin is though.

It's almost impossible for an Introvert to become a fully Extrovert, this requires a lot of "work" and suffering and I see no reason for someone to strive for it. "Extroversion" simply drains our batteries, period, how much of it we can withstand is another story.

This is a scientific study about something completely different.

It's not different, you claim that everyone can run with the same pace, you neglet the fact that for some groups of people this activity is much easier and for others it's harder, a lower BMI group like those with GS can run 10km with less effort. When you ask from everyone to "run at the same pace" you have to acknowledge that some groups are strugling to do that, it's not easy for them and it has nothing to do with "how much they try" obviously they try and they strungle more than those who seem to outperform them.

I can find an "extrovert" and examine their responses when they are 15 and when they are 45. When they are in college and when they meet their first true love.

again. situations matter. these are not intrinsic values.

Of course there can be some variations through life. Genetics and our environment is what I think mostly determine us, we can try to change part of our environment but we can't do much about our genes.

It's almost impossible for an Introvert to become a fully Extrovert, this requires a lot of "work" and suffering and I see no reason for someone to strive for it. "Extroversion" simply drains our batteries, period, how much of it we can withstand is another story.

It's impossible because nobody is a fully introvert and nobody is a fully extrovert. We are all a blend depending on the situation. Introvert exclusive and extrovert exclusive is a culture meme. You are online all day talking to people. You are not an introvert.

It's not different, you claim that everyone can run with the same pace, you neglet the fact that for some groups of people this activity is much easier and for others it's harder, a lower BMI group like those with GS can run 10km with less effort. When you ask from everyone to "run at the same pace" you have to acknowledge that some groups are strugling to do that, it's not easy for them and it has nothing to do with "how much they try" obviously they try and they strungle more than those who seem to outperform them.

I don't claim everyone runs with the same pace. I claim that people sometimes run fast and sometimes slower and that this is not a race or a competition. Again, false example. You use physiology. I use situation related example. Again, someone who talks to 100 people at a party is the same as you who talks to 100 people online.

Of course there can be some variations through life. Genetics and our environment is what I think mostly determine us,

well, this is all there is to the equation..

we can try to change part of our environment but we can't do much about our genes.

thing is there is no scientific basis that genes make you an introvert or an extrovert. In fact, there is no scientific evidence that at all that is falsifiable and replicable because the dynamics are so fluid.

it is a cultural meme. nothing more, nothing less.

I'm starting to doubt that you have ever met Introverts and Extroverts that you have understand them, part of the "problem" is that most people rank somewhere in the midle and you can't easily tell the difference in the first place. Another point of posible confusion is when an Extrovert or someone that "ranks" somewhere in the midle lives in an environment that forces him to behave more like an Introvert, ofcource he is not an Introvert! and you could be 100% accurate in this case, perhaps it's this group of people and behaviour that lead you to post this article.

"No, you are not an Extrovert" could as easily be as accurate as your title is.

You are going in circles mate. At least read another person arguing against it.

Your personal opinion and experience is rather irrelevant. this is why we have science. You just bought into the meme characteristics and you are reflecting on that belief

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-buddha-was-introvert/201404/there-is-no-such-thing-introvert-or-extrovert

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As a person who has gone through different introversion/extroversion phases during my lifetime, I agree that introversion cannot be a definition of one's personality but rather a description of their current phase. I know there are some who prefer to form stronger bonds with fewer people and others who prefer to form more casual bonds with more people. However as everything else in life this depends on many complex random interactions which shape our behaviour and it is something that can be changed according to circumstances. Labeling someone as "introvert" is way too simplistic. Social withdrawal can be an effect of low self-confidence, or nourishing a need for uniqueness, or disinterest due to an illness/deficiency, or dissatisfaction with the current communication system, or being busy with other projects, etc.

Then we have the questions: Who is more introverted, a person who doesn't meet anyone in real life but chats all day long in online groups, or a person who hangs out with more people but needs privacy and alone time for a longer period of time?
Or who is more introverted, a person who works in a highly sociable environment and has learned to socialize with many customers and colleagues out of necessity, or a person who works from home and has learned to communicate with less people in a more deep and effective way? The problem is that you cannot measure just the result and ignore the parameters.

Very interesting points, @elemenya. There does, however, seem to be a significant difference between online interaction and in-person. The former seeming to take more effort.

It takes more effort for some, not for others

Have you seen Good Will Hunting? I think often, especially smart people with high IQ's tend to try and rationalise trauma. Their minds start to take over their personality if that makes any sense.

Excellent points about a person's life situation weighing on a person's tendencies to be more introverted or extroverted. We all have moments of wavering toward one side or the other, I imagine. Like you, I've experienced this in different phases of my life. I agree that the "introvert" label is too simplistic and potentially harmful, because it seems restrictive, and it could even doom a person toward social withdrawal.

Yaaaaassss!

I mean, good post elemenya you really made me think.

People are always trying to explain their behavior and feelings, and using a word like introvert or extrovert is easier than trying to make sense of all the reasons to ones behavior. I do believe that genes affect our behavior to some extent, but most people who call them selves "introvert" or "extrovert" could behave completely differently in a different time and place.

E.g. I used to think of myself as a extrovert when I was younger, then at age 16 I moved to a new country where I did not speak the language and I was really quiet for the first weeks until I started to learn some Spanish. But by then most people around me had gotten used to me not talking and started thinking of me as the quiet girl, and they basically stopped talking to me. At first I tried to explain my silent behavior according to the surroundings, that I did not talk much because I did not know the language, but with time I even started viewing myself as a introvert and therefor I started behaving as one. And my behavior has kept changing back and forth from being more social and talkative to more withdrawn depending on my surroundings and the people I am with.

So I do completely agree with you @kyriacos that the environment has a huge impact on our behavior and that labels like introvert and extrovert tells more about our situation than our actual personality. Thank you for writing this post, I really enjoyed reading it! And I can see that you have awoken a lot of conversation :)

Excellent example. Thank you for sharing this

Any labels that one puts on themselves are limiting us, especially when they supposedly apply to our intrinsic qualities. I would say that there are certainly people with different levels of a need for interaction with other people and I would say that a sizable chunk of that is dictated by our innate personality, not just our situation and prior experience which surely play a large role too.

But I absolutely agree, labeling yourself as either one is a useless act that can easily do more harm than good. And if you want to measure something like that, don't view it as something binary, but as a spectrum and it's a spectrum one could certainly move along with time as you suggested.

Thank you and thanks for taking the time to read and reply.

Hmm, labels.

Could it be that along with this evolution in communication that people have begun to feel more isolated, so they seek out groups based on the labels they put out in social media (which is amazingly fertile ground for pop-psy)?

Trying to communicate everything in 140 characters and a few emojis makes it a lot easier when you can just say "introvert" or "extrovert".

Communication is the exchange of ideas, that's definitely happening and for some, doing it over the internet is less frightening. That's the good side of that double edged sword.

I'd like to think everyone will come out the other side of this technological evolution as better people. Technology has a tendency to get out ahead of our ethics & morality.

indeed. In a way they are used as a meme. Summary for identity.

Can we expect to begin seeing people gathering by way of some app where every (insert emoji here) will gather in one place?

That's the sharp-cutty edge of the sword.

I prefer to be multi-faceted.

I think @ionlysaymeep is stalking me.

Or maybe there's an ionlysaymeep meetup happening soon?

This post received a 2.9% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @kyriacos! For more information, click here!

Hmm. Not sure I entirely agree - but I don't entirely disagree either. I don't like large groups of people, but if necessary, I can function (quite well) in that environment. I just find it exhausting. I like being on my own. I don't play many computer games. I read books. I greatly prefer communication that is considered to mere verbal diarrhoea, so prefer the written word. Or the still image, not that fond of TV either. I'm a rock musician who hates loud noise. I can strut my stuff onstage, but go home, alone, to blissful silence. I rarely listen to background music. I like to live inside my own head.

So you can see why I simultaneously agree and disagree with you. I am able to do the extrovert things, but I don't like them as much as the introvert things. I suspect you've undermined your point a little by talking about computer games, as I can neatly sidestep that point ;)

I agree with you about in-game communication, by the way. My son does lots of it. I don't spend much time gaming, but when I do, I avoid communication with other players. I have tried it, and find it more stressful even than large real-life groups. The lack of visual cues makes it too difficult to manage etiquette.

Having said all of that - I actually agree with the bigger point, which is that the definition of "normal" is in fact discriminatory, and although my character traits (which have not changed noticeably with age) may fit a certain dysfunction, I am not disabled or in need of a psychologist or psychiatrist. I just like my own company. I don't need medicating for that. I'm as "normal" as the next person. ;-)

Hi @dangwalt. I feel the same way you do--no need to over-identify with labels, but there is validity (at least for me) in the preference for peaceful and solitary activities over boisterous ones. A younger me certainly preferred larger social groups but as I mature, I find being alone and focused provides greater satisfaction. (Said the lady on social media). Hee!

Haha - yeah, we may be undermining our point... ;-)

But agreed, younger me certainly did party - and I still do from time to time. But that's always been, for me, a secondary activity. The things that I really value, and have always valued, are generally more solitary activities...

Which might invite a certain kind of follow up comment, but I'm not making it! ;)

Oh, and - nice cat :-D

Again, if you have lived 100 years ago this would not have happened. You don't have an intrinsic behavior of "preferring to be alone or with smaller groups". Technology aided this behavior and reinforces it. This doesn't make you "introvert".

No, that's where I wholly disagree with you. My preference for my own company is not predicated on technology. In fact, I use modern tech far less than most. And I'm old enough to remember before computers and mobile phones. And I preferred my own company then too. I recall an occasion in school when we were asked to design our own coat-of-arms and motto. My motto was "Silence is golden." And that was 1981 or 1982. I don't think I knew anyone with a computer or mobile phone (not sure the latter had been invented), and we did not possess a television in my home.
I do accept that for many, your analysis applies. But I have the sort of mind that enjoys quite contemplation. Maybe in the past I'd have been a monk (though I am also of a logical mindset, so maybe not).
Having said that, I love steam engines and railways, so 100 years ago you would probably have found me sitting alongside a railway line somewhere watching the trains. For the time, that was the most modern, exciting tech there was... ;)
Introversion is a character type - always has been, it's there in characters in literature going back hundreds of years or more. Our modern assignation of introversion to a large portion of the population is, I agree, largely a result of technology.
But I, and many like me, would find your insistence that we're just as social an animal as the next troubling. I'm not. I never have been. And you cannot make me be so. To attempt to force me to fit your concept of normal is as unreasonable as the average shrink insisting that I'm autistic and need medication...
Another way of saying all of that is - some people are more social than others. I'm at the less sociable end of the line. What word you choose to describe that is up to you, but introvert will do. Loner is another. Solitary is yet another. Or hermit... I'm sure I can think of more if necessary! These words would not exist if they were not applicable to some people.

To be honest I find large crowds of people to be overwhelming, I have never enjoyed those sorts of situations. I find my self much more comfortable with smaller groups of people. Even in large groups I prefer to branch off with smaller numbers of people, and it is based upon this that I call my self introverted. I have never been the life of the whole party, I am comfortable being the life of a smaller party within the whole party. Being an introvert doesn't define me, but it does in a way describe the situations where I am more comfortable.

Perhaps if you "train" yourself with more exposure it might come easier. In fact, I guarantee you that it will become easier and easier with more exposure. Humans adopt in such way. There is nothing intrinsic inside of us that makes us fear large crowds or feeling unfmocortbale. Rather, the modern inclusion in our shitholes we call homes turned us into agoraphobics (more or less).

I have never been the life of the whole party, I am comfortable being the life of a smaller party within the whole party. Being an introvert doesn't define me, but it does in a way describe the situations where I am more comfortable.

You still need others to draw your energy from. This is all it matters, not the amount of people. You are as introvert as everyone else. You just happen to related to less people. Everyone has a limit and it can change depending on the type of job, psychological state, exposure, cultural paradigm and situation.

My one business coach once emphasized to me the difference between content and process in human interaction. it took me a while to get it, but has made a huge positive difference in the way I interact with people. When your analytical mind becomes a defense mechanism it can mess things up in relationships I think.

The jungian narrative suggests that introverts get their energy from within themselves while extroverts get it from those around them.

From what I've heard Jung has stated, a person who is purely a extrovert/introvert would be in a lunatics asylum. People are both, but people have a preference.

A person has to have awareness of their mind and the outside world together to stay sane.

Jung has defined Introversion/extroversion:

Introversion: One who is a introvert is primarily concerned with the subject (yourself). The real world is the inner-workings of the mind. In theory the introvert processes the world like a mound of clay, objects get molded into the clay leaving a impression. The introvert pays attention to impression the object made on them. The extrovert pays attention to the object primarily and not the impressions.

From what I understand about a "Introvert". (humor me) In theory they have a accounting ledger inside their brains. They need to make sure the ledger is "balanced" eventually. If the ledger is not updated they dont feel connected to the "real world".

Extroversion: One is concerned with the "object". The outside world is the real world.

So, Yes through nature and nurture a person does have a preference for One vs the other. Technology may change our genetics over time to favor introversion. You can have quiet and/or shy extroverts and have boisterous and/or bombastic introverts.

Look into Micheal pierce on Youtube he explains Introvert/extrovert well and check out on Reddit r/MBTI.

We have the preference but we are never one or the other hence the bogus of the terminology.

So the terminology shouldn't be used period?