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In her new book, The Happy Introvert:
A Wild and Crazy Guide for Celebrating Your True Self
[1], author Elizabeth Wagele seeks to inspire quiet, thoughtful
types to have more self-esteem—and fun. Using her
own playful cartoons, Wagele dispels the notion that introverts
are always depressed, and illustrates the humorous differences
between the two personality types and the inevitable miscommunications
that result. She tackles parenting, adolescence, relationships,
and other practical topics, and for good measure, gives
extraverts a (gentle) ribbing for assuming that introverts
are trying to be just like them, but are simply "not
doing a good job of it."
LIME recently chatted with the writer, cartoonist, pianist,
and original Happy Introvert.
LIME: Why did you write The Happy Introvert?
WAGELE: I felt I was on a mission to tell introverts about
themselves, and to tell extraverts about introverts. I
felt people just didn’t understand each other, and
it would be great if they did.
LIME: Can you define what an introvert is?
WAGELE: To begin with, we all have introversion and extraversion
in our personalities, and we couldn’t get through
one day without using both. It’s a continuum, but
you can sort of tell people who are basically more introverted
or basically more extraverted.
What surprised me when I looked into it—it’s
a neurological difference. Introverts have naturally very
busy minds, and we guard ourselves from being overwhelmed.
We don’t like loud noises. We don’t like big
crowds. When we’re little tiny children, it’s
hard to go into a huge nursery school with tons of children.
They might frighten us. Extraverts go into a loud nursery
school, and the louder the better for some of them. They’re
socially a little more gifted.
One thing that goes with being an introvert is that we
have rich inner lives. Introverts love other people, usually,
but they don’t need a whole day full of them. In
fact, being with other people tires them out after an
hour or two—even though they like them.
LIME: What about being around other people without conversation?
Can introverts enjoy people’s company in silence?
WAGELE: Yes! I love to watch other people. And sometimes
people will feel sorry for you, and they’ll say,
"C’mon, why aren’t you here doing this
activity with us?" [I’ll think] I didn’t
want to do that; I was very content watching, but extraverts
don’t understand that.
There’s another explanation of what introvert means.
You and I are having this conversation; when I’m
talking, you’re doing an introverted activity by
listening. That’s what introversion is. It’s
the preparation. Watching a group of kids or adults is
an introverted thing to do. And the activity that you’re
watching, say, a volleyball game, is an extraverted activity.
LIME: So in some ways, it’s just defining everyday
sorts of behaviors.
WAGELE: It is.
LIME: I think sometimes when people hear the word introverted,
they think of it as a synonym for antisocial.
WAGELE: Yeah, or cantankerous, or nerd, in the bad meaning
of that word. Naturally, we might be nerds because we
get interested in a subject in depth. That’s another
thing that introverts are really good at: concentrating.
Einstein was an introvert. Getting people enthused about
things—extraverts are usually better at that.
I’m proud of being an introvert. It’s fun!
LIME: I love parties, and I love being around people,
but that’s not the way I was growing up. I think
I have a 50/50 personality.
WAGELE: I know an introvert, and he’s definitely
an introvert, but he calls himself a party animal—so
I’d like to emphasize about my book and about
the whole subject that it’s very complex. It’s
good to be flexible, because you can still love parties
and be an introvert, or you can still be a bookworm
and be an extravert.
LIME: You mentioned that there’s a neurological
basis for introverted or extraverted personality, and
I’m wondering if that means that you’re
sort of stuck with what you’re born with.
WAGELE: Well, you can’t completely change the
wiring in your brain, but you can change a little bit.
I can’t really become an extravert. I’ve
tried a little bit. When I was much younger, I couldn’t
give a speech. And I had to give speeches because I
wrote books! And I actually learned how to do that by
going through the fear and just doing it. Environment
and neurology work together. You can’t completely
change what you were given, but if you’re highly
motivated to say, change one characteristic of yourself,
you should feel optimistic about it.
LIME: One quote in the book that grabbed me was, "The
creative spark takes place at the point where introversion
and extraversion meet." I think the common perception
is that you’re either creative or you’re
not, but you leave some room for everybody to be creative.
WAGELE: I think so. Whatever you are as a young person,
you might become the opposite as you age. In midlife,
the Jungian perspective is that you catch up on the
things that you didn’t do in the first half of
life. But then maybe as you’re even older than
midlife, you have to slow down because you’re
getting closer to death. And creativity means looking
at life in a new way.
LIME: You describe the 40s in particular as a very creative
time of life and almost like a second adolescence. I’m
37—what should I look forward to?
WAGELE: I think maybe it would be interesting for you
to look at my last chapter on the Myers-Briggs [Type
Indicator, a personality test [2]]. That’s what
I would think about, your sensate and intuitive and
feeling and thinking sides, and developing what you
aren’t, catching up on the things that you’ve
left out so far. Have you studied the Enneagram [3]?
That’s another way to do it.
LIME: You’ve written several [4] books [5] on
the Enneagram [6], but it didn’t seem to play
a starring role in this book.
WAGELE: I didn’t want to confuse things by putting
very much of the Enneagram in this book, but studying
the Enneagram and trying to incorporate all nine types
in your personality is very helpful. And nearing the
40s, it’s incredible what that can do.
LIME: One danger in typing yourself
is that you can see it as a limit and say, "This
is all I can be."
WAGELE: To me, it’s totally expansion, not diminution.
LIME: Do you think an introvert/extravert relationship
is possible? Or easy?
WAGELE: You know what happens if you have two introverts?
One becomes the extravert relative to the other. In
a way, every relationship is an introvert/extravert
relationship.
LIME: Your cartoons lend the book a lot of its personality.
WAGELE: They’re much more subtle than anything
I can write. I went through a period in my life when
I was drawing every dream. In all my books, I use cartoons.
I can’t imagine writing without them. Talk about
introversion: you can’t get much more introverted
than to use a cartoon that came from a dream!
[One cartoon on p. 22 shows] how introverts and extraverts
process, which I find very helpful, where the arrow
goes in and spins around for the introvert, and doesn’t
spin around for the extravert; it’s one of the
major differences, how information is handled. And that’s
a neurological difference that we can’t change.
Like, if I buy something to wear, I can’t wear
it until a few days later because it doesn’t feel
like it belongs to me. It’s so strange. It’s
crazy, actually. But I feel like it has to process through
my unconscious until it belongs to all the other clothes
in my closet! (laughs)
LIME: What else is essential to know about introverts?
WAGELE: Extraverts have more confidence, and I would
like to see introverts be more confident. Extraversion
is thought of as so desirable in our culture, in general,
that a lot of introverts try to be extraverts. It's
always best to be your true self.
LIME: What can non-introverted people learn about themselves
from introverted people?
WAGELE: How to be quiet sometimes. There are always
times in our lives when we have to be quiet, if we have
an injury or illness, or if something sad happens. If
you need somebody to hold your hand for something. Those
quiet times, that’s the gift of the introvert.
We were probably the shamans a long time ago.
Photo: Ulysses Books Lime.com
Links:
[1] Amazon.com
[2] MyersBriggs.org
[3] Enneagraminstitute.com
[4] Amazon.com
[5] Amazon.com
[6] Amazon.com
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