• megane-kun@lemmy.zip
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    19 hours ago

    I’m not really this person but I’ve often been told I am too comfortable with people to be an introvert.

    I can attest to this though. Even if I’m not front and center of a social gathering, it’s still incredibly draining to me, and would take a few days to recharge. Even longer if I’ve got to be in charge and be front and center (takes a few weeks to recharge from that).

    I think it’s a difference between what is natural (being alone, recharging, etc.) and what is forced (being front and center in a crowd). Being an introvert doesn’t mean you can’t learn being comfortable being front and center in a crowd. As you’ve said, it’s a matter of how you gain energy and what mode you’re most at home with.

    • TheFunkyMonk@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      I think a lot of people convolute introversion with social anxiety.

      My social life vastly improved when I switched to working remotely. When I wasn’t, I was burning all my social energy at work and nights and weekends I’d go into hermit mode. Now I’m sitting on my social charger all day and have the energy to hang out with my friends after work/on weekends. Lots of them don’t believe I’m introverted.

      A bartender friend coined the term “closet extrovert” to describe me and I don’t hate it.