Introverts & Extraverts

Howdy folks!  It’s Patrick (Skip’s Tech Geek) again.

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Skip and I were talking yesterday (Wednesday) morning while out running errands.  He was feeling overwhelmed about the volume of comments and emails he’s been getting over the last 3 weeks from the now 461 Today’s Word subscribers / At God’s Table.  He wants to read, think about, and reply to all of them. But he simply cannot.

Let me explain a little more.

Skip is an introvert. If you’ve seen him speak, you would probably be very surprised at that.  But then again, “introversion” doesn’t really mean “shy.”  It means he thinks to talk.

Extraverts talk to think.  (I’m an extrovert by the way.)

Given all that Skip has been writing about ‘ezer, marriage, and relationships, I asked him if he thought it was ok for me to post this short article about the difference between introverts and extraverts written by a friend of ours, Roy H. Williams.

Cheers & Shalom,

Patrick
(Skip’s Tech Geek)

Introverts and Extraverts

Run the following ad in any newspaper:
2006 Honda Civic DX 4dr, White, 63,000 miles, $8,100. Call 555-1212

These are the questions you’ll be asked by nearly half your callers:
“What year is that Honda Civic? Is it a 2-door or 4-door? What color? How many miles on it? How much are you asking?”

I know this because I bought and sold an average of 3 cars a month for the first several years Pennie and I were married. I’ve answered these questions many hundreds of times and in every instance the information was in the newspaper ad.

I always wanted to ask, “Where did you get this phone number?”

Then a few years ago Dr. Richard D. Grant taught me the difference between introverts and extraverts.

Introversion and extraversion don’t refer to shyness and boldness. They refer only to how you charge your emotional batteries. Introverts gain energy from internal contemplation, centering, and quiet time. Extraverts gain energy from external people, places, and things.

I’m an introvert. Those car questions were asked by extraverts. Contrary to what introverts like to think, extraverts aren’t stupid. They simply prefer the spoken word to the written.

Books are written for introverts. Audiobooks are recorded for extraverts.

Introverts rarely say what they are thinking.
They say only what they have thought. Introverts think to talk.

Extraverts talk to think.

When introverts get stuck, they close the door, turn off the radio, take the phone off the hook and go deep inside themselves to find the answer.  When extraverts get stuck they strike up a conversation with someone. This gets the mental flywheel spinning again and sure enough, within moments, out pops an idea. Extraverts get their best ideas during conversation.

Although nearly half our population is introverted, the US maintains a strongly extraverted social etiquette:

Focus groups measure the opinions of extraverts.
Churches plan social events for extraverts.
Companies hand out promotions to extraverts
and sales trainers teach us how to sell to extraverts.

Do you remember the old sales adage, “close early, close hard and close often?” This may be a sure way to keep your extraverted customer engaged in conversation and “flush out” their true objection, but you’ll just as surely alienate your introverted customers. Good luck with that.

Extraverts think introverts are socially inept.
Introverts think extraverts are noisy.
What extraverts call “reaching out to someone,” introverts call an invasion of privacy. Extraverts prefer to work in teams. Introverts do their best work alone.

Given their polar opposite preferences, can introverts and extraverts work well together, become partners, be happily married?

Absolutely.

The key to showing courtesy to an extravert is to listen to them more than you think is necessary. Maintain eye contact, nod your head and smile.

The key to showing courtesy to an introvert is to give them time and space for reflection and processing. Don’t bombard them with questions or subject them to a barrage of jabber when they’re “all peopled out.” Give them an uninterrupted hour to read the mail and they’ll soon be ready to hear about your day.

Do it however works best for you,
but keep your emotional batteries charged.

Happy Holidays.

Roy H. Williams

PS: If you want a thing done cheerfully, ask an extravert to do it. If you want it done well, ask an introvert. Introverts are a minority in the general population but they’re the majority of the gifted.

Source: Introverts and Extroverts, by Roy H. Williams

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Truthful Kindness

2009-02/19-0700
Patrick, I got a kick out of your phrase regarding “extra credit” 🙂 .

It surprises me to see this subject as a posting, but I think it’s a wonderful introduction for an internet community. Let me introduce myself; My name is Truthful Loving Kindness. (Yes it really is my legal first, middle, and last name.) I’m a Christian woman over 50yo who happens to have several medical, neuro & mental disabilities. I have a big black Newfoundland Service Dog to pull my wheelchair. I am INTP (that means I am an introvert who enjoys researching & analyzing -including Temperament/motivation analysis) & my husband is ENTP (extrovert). His motto should be: “There’s always a better way to do any project & if you LISTEN a minute I will figure out what it is, then I will communicate it in a funny or creative way, using lots of terms that you will find in a dictionary but hardly ever hear.” 🙂

For me, part of INTP means that I am really LOUSY at “small talk”. On our first date we sat on a bench and asked questions: What means most to you in life? What are your political views, your theological views, what are some of the parenting techniques you use most? How do you see the issue of authority between husband and wife? How important is this? … or that? Then, 30min later, when I had told him about all these traumatic events in my life, he looked at me, paused dramatically, and asked “… so then, do you see yourself as a ‘victim’?” It really made me think & it took a while to come up with a reply, but that question was one of the turning points in my life. At that time I was office manager & running 2miles during my lunch breaks. Three months later I was bitten by the second tick with the diseases of Lyme & Babesia, but the effects were gradual & I didn’t need a wheelchair until 8yrs later, & wasn’t diagnosed for 15yrs.

Introductory verbal fluff is disconcerting for me. If I’m going to spend my time talking to someone I’d like to REALLY talk & really listen. Why do you do what you do? How are you REALLY feeling? Is there anything I can do, say, or listen to, that would help or encourage you? If I can’t be either establishing a real relationship, or be helping you in some way, then I would prefer to research something on the computer, read my bible or a textbook, figure out a system, work on the architecture program, design ANYTHING, or stand on the sidelines watching (because I can learn a lot about a person by watching their body language & listening to their tone of voice, even if I can’t hear a word they say). Both verbal interaction & written interaction take a long time & quite a bit of effort for me. I started composing this msg 2hrs ago.

Soooo … What about you? If I didn’t terribly offend you with Too Much Information, who are you? What are you about? How do you work? Meanwhile I think I’d better go take a nap. 🙂

-Truthful L Kindness & “Blessing” the wheelchair Service Dog

Patrick Sullivan Jr. (Skip's Tech Geek)

Reply to TLK {seesmic_video:{“url_thumbnail”:{“value”:”http://t.seesmic.com/thumbnail/ZzZLjaqxNI_th1.jpg”}”title”:{“value”:”Reply to TLK “}”videoUri”:{“value”:”http://www.seesmic.com/video/tJjRvULLpK”}}}

Truthful Kindness

Thanks for the reply. Most people call me True (spelled “Tru”) but some use TLK.

I really appreciate all the time & energy you guys have devoted to bring this idea to fruition.

-Tru & Blessing

Gayle

What a helpful piece for understanding others. Thanks for this, Patrick.

JAN CARVER

Popycock – that sounds like a bunch of Greek theology to me – certainly not Hebrew for sure. Stop all this worrying about whether you are going to be able to answer everyone & everything in life – get over it & roll it over on to HIM/Yahweh/God/Jesus/Holy Spirit (He’s your Helper – not Patrick & not us) – you keep taking the burden back instead of laying it on the alter & leaving it there – be free indeed from the perfectionism or whatever it is that has a stronghold over you – it is certainly not the peace of G-d!!!! 🙂

Under His Wings
Jano

Jackie

Is it possible to be an introvert and become an extrovert after you’re born again? Sounds like a stretch, doesn’t it? I was an introvert; now I would call myself more of an extrovert. But I have to get to know my surroundings before the extrovert comes out. Possible?

CYndee

I think you ARE who God made you to be, yet without the burden of sin, we are FREE to become more like Jesus. Jesus adapted to every situation because He listened for what the Father was telling Him, and then He actually DID what he was told.

Truthful Kindness

2009-02/20: 0900
Jackie,
This stuff has always been tremendously fun for me (like other people would feel about sports or any game) so I have worked with several Temperament or Motivational diagnostic systems, but mostly the MBTI (in which the first category is “introvert/extrovert”). I think those scores are generally somewhat consistent; they CAN change during your life, or differ in one category of life than another (say work cf family) but rarely is there an extreme change. Temperament shows your Tendencies, hopefully not inflexibilities. If I recall correctly, a change in introvert cf extrovert BEHAVIOR is much more likely — and be a more noticeable change –than change of introvert vs extrovert as ENERGY mode. Also, it is possible for life circumstances to force change as a coping mechanism when all possibility of energy from that mode is cut out of your life. I know my scores are different now than they were while I was in an unsafe marriage, & my son was a strong extrovert until our divorce. He chose to live with his dad 4yrs, since which time he appears to be a strong introvert (no medium ground). Whether that change was most influenced by the divorce itself or the lack of a cushion (me) between him & his dad, I will probably never know.

Soooo your scores in the introvert/extrovert category would probably be mild; not extreme on either end. Your energizing mode has probably remained somewhat consistent after salvation. I know that my “aha” moments, or most intimate time with G-d, “charging my batteries” are usually during or after private prayer, private bible study, or just “sitting” alone with Him. In contrast, the local pastor & his secretary are both most energized by congregational worship and group bible study. I don’t remember much before salvation (I was only 5yo) but my mom makes it sound like I was uncomfortable in groups even then. Were it not for my perception that God desires us to be “salt & light”, to “not neglect” meeting together, & exercise of “spiritual gifts” appears to be mostly in social activities, I would rarely be in a group of more than 5 persons at a time. But that may not be true for everyone; I’ve never investigated that question. It’s an interesting one, thanks 🙂

After thinking about it, what’s your conclusion, if I may ask?
-Truthful L Kindness & “Blessing” the wheelchair Service Dog

CYndee

Hey, Patrick, thanks for posting this article. This explains everything. 🙂 It reminds me of a phrase I’m quite fond of: DIFFERENT ISN’T WRONG, IT’S JUST DIFFERENT. It’s too bad we spend so much time trying to force others to be like us–or TO like us–rather than simply accepting each other and loving from the heart.

Michael

Thanks Patrick,

I thought the introvert vrs extrovert article was very interesting and helpful.

My mother taught the concept to me over 50 years ago, so it was not new to me.

But your post provided some new insights.

I am an introvert and so is my 10 year old son.

My wife and daughter and most of my friends are extroverts.

As I was reading your post, I realized that I get very frustrated with my son, because he does not act like an extrovert.

My son is a very good kid, gifted at school, and a complete tech geek.

But it takes him 10 minutes to answer the simplest question.

Like, “are you ready for bed?” or do you want to go swimming? Guess he is just thinking 🙂

Patrick Sullivan Jr. (Skip's Tech Geek)

Yeah, trying to understand people better so that I can have a better relationship with them has become a life long goal. This was a big piece for me. Glad you liked it as well.

Btw, Skip is in Spain (I’m meeting up with him in 4 days! =) so it’ll take him awhile to reply to your other comment about the passage in Matthew.
https://skipmoen.com/2009/02/18/where-is-he/

Shalom Michael.

Well, hope you have a great time in Spain; I think Madrid is as beautiful as any city I have ever seen.

Be sure to see the paintings in the Prado. Especially, Saint George and the Dragon, by Rubens.

Shalom Patrick.

John Lightfoot

This short article has shed more light on both my wife’s and my personalities than anything I have ever read (seriously). Following 38 years of marriage, I can confirm that introverts (me) and extroverts (her) can get along, and now I have an even greater understanding and appreciation for my ezer.

Alfred Ells

Great insight on introverts & extroverts…One critique: I don’t beleive introverts are the majority of the gifted. It depends upon the area of gifting. In science, math, etc. one would expects introverts to be the more gifted ‘thinkers’. However, in many areas of business success, relational expertise, etc. the exraverts rule the roost. It’s the old tension between IQ and EQ (emotional quotient).
Al

Truthful Kindness

Al said, “I don’t believe introverts are the majority of the gifted. It depends upon the area of gifting.”

All documentation that I have seen totally agrees with that opinion. It is the same with decision-making preference; those who value “emotional” factors slightly higher than “thinking” factors in their decisions are frequently much more gifted IN CERTAIN AREAS, than those who value “thinking/analysis” factors as slightly higher in their decision-making process. And the opposite is also true. It depends entirely on the area of gifting. (However, the introvert/extrovert ENERGY-element does not always correlate with the thought/emotion DECISION-element.)

-Tru (“introverted + thinker”) & “Blessing” the Service Dog (who is an extreme extrovert) 🙂