Re: Hoping this works...

Date: Mar. 13th, 2006 09:42 am (UTC)
It's not a particular chemical, it's overall electrical potentiality of the brain. Introverts have more internal stimulation at any given time than extroverts. There's a theory that states that there is a natural "bliss point" - the point at which the electrical stimulation of the brain is neither too little or too much. The theory is that introverts are naturally closer to this point, so they require less stimulation to reach the bliss point than do extroverts.

And I'm becoming more and more confused as to my own profile - I have a lot of the introvert's difficulties with making small talk; I absolutely hate unstructured social situations with strangers. Sometimes I'll shut down and feel tongue-tied and awkward, but sometimes I'll babble and say too much. However, this might have less to do with my natural introversion/extroversion than with the pressure to be witty, charming, and significant.

I think the acid test is whether, after a long hard day when you feel worn out, you want to come home and be alone or you want to come home and be with people. In that situation, I fall heavily on the extrovert side.

And my point in my post wasn't so much that society favours people who can be alone, but that society tells you there's something wrong with you if you're not completely and totally independent. Needing to be with people is seen as weak, and the ultimate goal of society is to have "your own space." That's an introvert's goal. I can have "my own space" for about twenty minutes before I get bored and itchy and want to have a party.
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