Albuquerque Journal

Join club for a little quiet time

Groups cater specifical­ly to introverts with talk and activities

- BY NARA SCHOENBERG

In her quest to avoid small talk and superficia­l socializin­g, Michaela Chung has resorted to a tactic that may surprise you.

She has signed up for organized groups.

When she was in high school, student council and a church youth group provided Chung with the kind of structured socializin­g and meaningful interactio­n that introverts prefer. As an adult, she found her niche in meetups for cocktail lovers and outdoor adventurer­s. She embraced the joys of competitiv­e salsa dancing — both the dancing part and the socializin­g without the constant chatter part — and found new friends among her fellow dancers.

“Just because we’re introverts, it doesn’t mean we don’t like to meet people,” says Chung, 29, creator of the website Introvert Spring (www.introverts­pring.com ). “It’s a matter of how much small talk can you endure to get to the good stuff.”

Not all of America’s estimated 80 million to 160 million introverts embrace organized groups, and even those who do offer some caveats. The introvert acceptance movement, which clicked into high gear with the arrival of the 2012 bestseller “Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking,” by Susan Cain, stresses that introverts, who typically think before they speak and draw energy from quiet, solitary activities, need not ape the boisterous backslappi­ng of extroverts to achieve success or happiness.

“Make sure that you honor your need to be alone and your energy levels are fully restored before you push yourself to join a group,” Chung says.

Yet organized groups offer numerous benefits, from improving skills, to expanding social networks, to broadening experience­s. And in some ways, group activities are a natural for introverts, allowing them

Brukman, an introvert who originally went to the Meetup website to find a chess group, signed on as an introvert meetup organizer when he browsed the website and saw that the local introvert group was leaderless and in danger of shutting down.

“At the beginning, it was like a job interview or a date where you’re sitting outside with butterflie­s saying, ‘OK, deep breath,’” Brukman says of leading introvert gatherings. But, over time, his shyness has dissipated, and though he still needs quiet downtime to relax and recharge, he embraces his leadership role.

“There’s nothing like coming home and going, ‘Man, 50 people had a great time tonight because of me.’ Or to see people post comments: ‘Oh, I met so many great people. That was a lot of fun.’ It’s just satisfying to me. I’m a massage therapist, so for me, giving is important,” says Brukman, 51. “It’s the same sort of giving to others.”

“Introvert Power” author Laurie Helgoe was looking for like-minded friends when she took a life-writing class, which allowed her to meet friends slowly, and to get to know them through the significan­t life events they addressed in their writing.

Some of her friends from the class formed a writing group, which has been together for 10 years. The core group of about six is diverse, Helgoe says, but members share a common interest and support each other’s literary endeavors. a chance to explore the interests they often pursue with great passion, and providing them with social settings that maximize their strengths as thoughtful listeners and well-informed enthusiast­s.

“If you need to meet people, it’s a really good way to do it,” says Sophia Dembling, author of “The Introvert’s Way: Living a Quiet Life in a Noisy World” (Perigree).

Still, some groups are better for introverts than others. Dembling looks for groups that are the right size: large enough that she can comfortabl­y retreat into silence for a while if she wants to, but small enough to avoid overstimul­ation. For her, about 10 to 20 people is ideal, although she would be willing to go smaller in the case of an activity like wine-tasting, in which the conversati­on is likely to focus closely on the group activity.

Dembling also suggests that introverts consider the format of the meeting. A speech or film followed by discussion can work well for introverts, who like to listen and get to know people slowly. A less structured group can open the door to lots of mingling and small talk, which introverts typically find unrewardin­g and uncomforta­ble.

Dembling says she enjoyed a writers’ group with six members, only one of whom she initially knew. Members would meet at a cafe, do writing exercises and then read them out loud.

“It was so much fun,” she says. “And the immediate feedback was great.” She gradually got to know the other members of the group, and found the amount of socializin­g — an hour or two at a time — worked well for her.

Dembling says that book clubs, theater groups, choral groups and athletic groups can all work well for introverts.

“I’ve always thought that improv sounds awful, but I’ve heard of introverts who like karaoke, which to me is a ‘shoot-me’ kind of thing,” Dembling says. “It just depends on what you love and trial and error, because we’re all really different.”

Organized groups such as the Denver Socializin­g Introverts Meetup cater specifical­ly to people who don’t go in for big, noisy social outings but still want to make friends and have fun. Organizer Scott Brukman says the group has gone from about 160 people to more than 1,200 in the past two years, with members turning out for museum and book events, low-key happy hours and coffeehous­e gatherings.

 ?? MCT ?? “Just because we’re introverts, it doesn’t mean we don’t like to meet people,” says Michaela Chung, 29, creator of the website Introvert Spring. “It’s a matter of how much small talk can you endure to get to the good stuff.”
MCT “Just because we’re introverts, it doesn’t mean we don’t like to meet people,” says Michaela Chung, 29, creator of the website Introvert Spring. “It’s a matter of how much small talk can you endure to get to the good stuff.”

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