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On being a loud-mouthed introvert

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Whenever I tell people that I used to be a wallflower at school, they laugh loudly in my face and tell me to pull the other one. I don’t blame them (though I can secretly plan to maim them while they sleep). I’m sort of a social Christmas beetle. It’s like a social butterfly, but with less grace & a propensity to bash into people & make them scream.

Why this outer persona is handy is because it tricks even me into thinking I’m fantastically confident. Why it sucks is that when my social angst kicks in, I only have myself to blame for having committed myself to it.

Here’s an example: I have, with my usual impulsiveness, signed up for boxing classes in order to get back into a moderate state of fitness. Boxing is perfect because it suits my short attention span, bursts of energy & I get to punch people in the gut. I’ve attended classes for 2 weeks so far. I’ve smiled at my fellow classmates, joked about how much I suck at left hooks, and bumped many sweaty fists. But tonight, in my third week, sitting in my gym clothes with my body bursting to get moving, I just can’t do it. Not because I’m not keen to exercise, but because: People. I’ve overdone it. I now am so thoroughly fed up with meeting new people that I can’t face this crucial third week (in which I get to hone that left hook and practice some fancy footwork) and have realised that I will probably never go back to that gym again. It’s too intimate, too busy, too social. And I’m afraid of all the people. Even the nice ones! They will ask me how I’m progressing, they’ll scowl at me when I forget the punch sequence, they’ll nod in a way that I can’t read at all when I get teamed up with them for sparring (insecurity, insecurity!). Then I’ll worry that I wasn’t friendly enough to the fourteen year old kid with the jolly face, or to the pretty man who started at the same time as me and was so encouraging in class. 

Via http://theantisocialmedia.com/tag/cartoon/page/3/
Via http://theantisocialmedia.com/tag/cartoon/page/3/

What a ridiculous asshole I am. But that’s how it is. I want to crawl in a nice, sizeable hole which I dug myself, pull my laptop or a book inside and stay there for the rest of the year. I read recently that drinking a glass of red wine is like spending an hour at the gym. I don’t know which quack wrote that, but I like him. I think I’ll take a few bottles of wine into the hole with me.

Most people suffer from some form of social anxiety, I presume. Some of us get anxious when we have to stand up in front of a crowd & speak, some of us can’t even endure standing in a queue at the bank. For me, this social anxiety is heavily masked under a pretty thick cover of social aggressiveness. “HELLO THERE! AM I TALKING LOUDLY AT YOU? THAT’S MY VOICE, I CAN’T HELP IT. WHAT’S YOUR NAME? HERE’S TEN RAND I FOUND. OH LOOK AT THAT UGLY DOG.” That sort of thing. Noisy, bubbling, utterly senseless (no, I’m sure I make sense occasionally). Curiously, the extrovert is as much a solid part of me as the introvert. I’m not being false when I bound up to somebody and try to ruffle their hair (largely unsuccessfully because of my stature) and tell them I want to come over and visit their ten cats. This is all 100% true. But also true is that I might panic when I meet all of their cats and they expect me to pet them and come and visit them again.

Always so awkard.
Always so awkward.

Sometimes I might spend the week sobbing silently and wishing I could kill all of my friends and taxidermy them so I could still look at their pretty faces without the pressure of having to be normal and social and punctual. I want to be the quiet, creepy child I used to be.

At aged 6, I was so quiet & shy that the driver of the school bus once forgot I as in there and drove home with me. I also once got locked in the classroom while walking about a metre behind the teacher because I was too afraid to speak up and tell her I was there (that made for a good befriending story of one of my dearest pals who rescued me from Std 1 hell that day). I regularly received a sticker with a picture of a ghost on it saying “Sssh!” which was the standard reward for the day’s quietest pupil. When I hit high school I was determined to shake my wallflower personality. I had things I wanted to say! I had a fresh start! But I was mistaken when I thought that the me that liked the quiet, the isolation, the freedom to be alone with your wild thoughts, was gone. She’s there and she’s making me act weird and skip my much-loved boxing class and confuse people by being friendly with them and then running away when they want to talk to me some more. She’s introverted, shy and also extroverted and bold, and she’s trying to figure out when the best time to get to campus is when the fewest people will be able to observe her going up the Jammie steps. She might get up early to go to class and will turn around at the door because of all the people inside.

Aged 4 with my introverted best friend. We spent days not talking to one another.
Aged 4 with my introverted best friend. We spent days not talking to one another.

It’s a conundrum. So I’d like to stand with (but reasonably far away from) my fellow loud introverts and recommend that we get together once and talk about it, then happily never meet again. Then we can enjoy years of not talking to each other or politely pretending we can’t see one another on the train or at Pick ‘n Pay.

ron

Or perhaps I need to learn how to conquer this problem. So that I stop quitting great/important things (like answering the phone, doing my job, running on the promenade, visiting the dentist, volunteering at cool places, or doing my grocery shopping. If anybody has any tips, I’m all ears. I promise. As long as it doesn’t involve us seeing one another on the regular. Ugh, what a fucking drama queen I am. I’m sure I’m not alone. Though I daresay I’d like to be.

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3 responses to “On being a loud-mouthed introvert”

  1. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    (thought I’d leave this here as well) I love this very much. I feel like we are already engaged in the aforementioned conversation. Let’s keep on at it (in our separate corners of course and, possibly, in the dark. x

  2. Wafflez Avatar

    Oh my god…

    I usually never leave a reply, especially to old blog posts on a word press site like this one, but I’m just astonished. I thought I was the only person who feels this way. Actually, the only reason I stumbled across this article was because I wanted to know if I was the only loud introvert out there- or if it was actually a real thing. I absolutely hate large crowds. When I’m walking in a cafeteria I feel like I suddenly forget how to walk. I feel like everybody is staring at me, judging me. It doesn’t help that I also have many people I try to avoid because I just don’t want to see them anymore. And when I do, its like my secondary extroverted personality kicks in and I’m all laughs. But I feel like I just don’t trust them. In fact I don’t think I have any close friends I can trust. People look at me like this optimistic, outgoing and hilariously narcissistic guy… but that’s not who I am at home. I think I talk a lot out of fear, or as a means to close the awkward silent void between my colleagues, teammates and co-workers. Nevertheless, I thank you for this.

    1. ieatcheesedaily Avatar

      Thanks so much for taking the time to respond! It’s strange, this perfect image that one can create of having our shit together and being the chipper social butterfly, but it turns out the opposite is true. Perhaps it’s a sort of heightened empathy/sensitivity which makes us want to make other people comfortable and then it exhausts us so we scurry back to our little caves. I’ve had the good fortune to move to a place where people are quite a bit more socially distant to those back home and don’t even speak to one another in the lifts 🙂 Trust is also something very tough for me, because I know how easy it is to put on the social mask, so I expect everybody is masking it too. Which I realised was pretty unfair on my friends/acquaintances, but still hard for me to figure out how to manage. Wishing you the best with finding your own balance! And glad to find a fellow loud-mouthed introvert out there 🙂