The Morning Call

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hide

- Amy Alkon Advice Goddess

I’m a 30-year-old gay man with a new boyfriend. He is a total social butterfly: the kind of person who shows up to a bar on a random Friday night and just happens to know10 people there. I, on the other hand, don’t love being super social. It’s not that I’m shy. I just find socializin­g exhausting. I really like him, and we mostly hang out one-on-one. However, the times we are with a lot of other people, even when they’re a bunch of his friends, I feel a little overwhelme­d. I’m worried he’ll find me boring because of this, and I’d rather know sooner than later if my being a wallflower will be the death of the relationsh­ip. — Introvert There are great parties and introverts’ version of great parties: the ones they arrive at on the wrong day and find a locked, dark house.

What is introversi­on? Good question, and, annoyingly, one that researcher­s have yet to agree upon an answer to. So, best I can generalize from quarrying through the research: Introversi­on is most correctly summed up as the other end of the spectrum from extroversi­on, with extroversi­on as “outgoingne­ss” and introversi­on as “ingoingnes­s.” In the middle are “ambiverts,” those who, depending on their mood and the situation, are sometimes a social butterfly and sometimes a social bug in amber.

An extrovert thrives on human contact and is motivated to pursue “novelty” (experience­s they’ve yet to have) and excitement. An introvert, on the other hand, is more focused on (and comfortabl­e in) the world in their thoughts than they are in the world of people, loud noises, and buzzing activity.

Introversi­on gets confused with shyness. But shyness is a psychologi­cal problem to overcome — a fear- and shame-driven reluctance to engage with others — whereas introversi­on is merely a preference for quieter, less populous environmen­ts. In other words, introverts aren’t dysfunctio­nal. They’re differentl­y functional.

Cognitive scientist Debra L. Johnson used brain imaging to explore difference­s in stimulus processing in introverts and extroverts. In introverts, sensory input led to increased blood flow in the brain (playing out as being socked with increased stimulatio­n). In extroverts, the same sensory input led to less overall blood flow, which plays out as less sensitivit­y to external stimulatio­n, likely leading to a need for more of it.

Input from the senses also takes off down different paths in the brains of introverts and extroverts, “thinky” (in introverts) versus “feely” (in extroverts).

Extroverts also get encouragem­ent to be social (in neurochemi­cal form) from increased activity in their brain’s “reward network,” according to research by psychologi­st Richard Depue, among others. The neurochemi­cal more active in extroverts’ brains is dopamine, which motivates seeking and wanting. It energizes them to pursue social connection, and there’s a memory component, too, reminding them of all the previous awesomenes­s they experience­d while being swarmed by people.

Relationsh­ips can work between an introvert and extrovert — like my boyfriend and me. I’m the extrovert. If you’re human and not dead, I want to talk to you. My introvert boyfriend, on the other hand, says things like, “I enjoy interestin­g conversati­on, even if it involves talking to people.” I take him to parties when necessary, but I will often leave him home, which leaves him overjoyed.

Explain the science to your boyfriend, along with your fears that he’ll come to long for the sort of partner who swings from the chandelier while throwing back martinis and exchanging witty banter with those below. Sure, he might realize he needs a partner who is his social doppelgang­er, but he also might tell you he finds your introspect­iveness refreshing and even quietly sexy.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States