212 Quotes About Introversion
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
For an introvert, interacting in a group setting does mean missing out. Where there is too much input, the introvert misses his mind, his subjectivity, his freedom, his very potential. The high-stimulus social environment, the “where it’s at on a Friday night,” this apparent “more,” becomes a prison to the introvert. He can’t wait to be free—to get out and away from the noise, the talk, the interference with his inner process.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
Though some of us like to get on stage, many introverts are content to put on their invisibility cloaks and watch. But well-meaning extroverts will have none of that! They need to draw us out, invite us to participate—repeatedly—and question why we are so depressed as to not want to join.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Isabel Briggs Myers
-
Quote
The best-adjusted people are the‘psychologically patriotic,’ who are glad to be what they are.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
It would be wise to be concerned about the introvert who is deprived of solitude. Is she neglecting herself due to depression? Is she falling victim to guilt and self-reproach? Does she feel cut off from pleasure? Does she feel dead?
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
The Socially Accessible introvert looks like an extrovert on the outside and sees extroversion as a bar that he or she can never quite reach. These individuals are often very successful in social arenas, but fault themselves for not having more fun.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
We have an assumption here in America that the kind thing to do is to be “friendly,” which means being extroverted, even intrusive. The Japanese assume the opposite: being kind means holding back.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
Where else but cyberspace does the introvert have the opportunity to start in our comfort zone of written communication and talk later?
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
Our challenge as introverts is to adopt the attitude, based on the introversion assumption, that your need to retreat requires no explanation—it is self-evident.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Laurie Helgoe
-
Quote
For the introvert, as for the flâneur, observing is not a fallback position—something we do because we can’t participate. We watch because we want to. There is something wonderfully grounding about remaining still as others mull about—or mulling about while others remain still. Against the backdrop of the scene, the introvert feels more like an “I.
- Tags
- Share