Santa Fe New Mexican

Extroverts, (introverts, too) facing quarantine challenges

- By Deepti Hajela

Within days, Vicktery Zimmerman had figured out how to connect with friends and family even as she and her husband shelter in place at their Chicago home.

There are the FaceTime calls. There’s the movie night (remote, of course) with another couple. There are plans for a game night. Whatever it takes to keep the 30-year-old self-professed extreme extrovert and public relations specialist from, as she puts it, “spinning in circles.”

Justin Zimmerman, 32, her introverte­d husband, is bemused — and amused — by it all. “Now it’s become a thing where people are FaceTiming us all day, every day to say ‘Hi,’ ” the doctoral student said, laughing. “I’m like, ‘You really don’t have to.’ ”

The self-isolation designed to arrest the coronaviru­s’s spread has turned the tables on many norms — like living life outside the four walls of home, gathering socially at the drop of a hat and having everyday social interactio­ns with anyone from your local barista to the guy at the corner store.

But even in previrus times, there were people for whom those things were more pressure than pleasure: introverts, those who largely get their energy from inside themselves and selected interactio­ns with people, as opposed to extroverts, who obtain it from outside themselves.

The quarantine­s and distancing have upended that. It’s a relief for some introverts who now don’t need excuses for why they don’t want to be out — and, equally, a struggle for extroverts seeking out social connection in a world where that’s suddenly a limited commodity.

Eric Bellmore, an avowed extrovert, found himself yelling a greeting across the road to someone he didn’t know when he went for a jog near his home. He just wanted a moment of interactio­n.

“It’s mind-boggling to grasp how much I need to be around other folk,” said Bellmore, 47, who works in IT in Mount Pleasant, Mich. “My wife actually said to me last week: ‘For someone like you, this must be hell.’ ”

It’s been a relief for David Choi, a 34-year-old Los Angeles musician who is an avowed introvert even as the demands of profession­al musiciansh­ip required him to be networking and making the social rounds. The demand to quarantine, he says, “gives you an excuse to stay home, which is what you want to do in the first place.”

The world generally has been a place where extroverts are rewarded and introverts get a side-eye, says Lisa Kaenzig, the highly extroverte­d dean of William Smith College. She has studied introverte­d learners for years.

But the quarantine­s have changed those assumption­s, she says. While everyone shares in the anxiety and worry over the virus, the actual demand of staying home and limiting social interactio­n has felt like a boon to the introverts she’s spoken to. “All of the things that make the world harder for them as introverts, the world is better for them right now. They’re adapting much more quickly,” she says.

One introvert she spoke to was actually leery of the post-quarantine return to socializin­g, Kaenzig said, not looking forward to being swarmed by effusive extroverts looking for hugs of greeting.

For some introverts, though, there has been a struggle with the idea that staying home is a matter of government demand, that there’s no option of going to a cafe or coffee shop if they did want some human interactio­n. Jackie Aina would often do just that to break up the monotony of working from home, where the makeup artist and online content creator already spends most of her time. “Being able to go to the local coffee shop, it’s nice just to switch up the environmen­t,” says Aina, 32, of Los Angeles.

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