You seem like an opportunistic introvert. You'll take advantage of extrovert situations if they are available, feasible and if you still have the energy for them.
You enjoy them, but don't thrive on them. It takes so long for you to recharge after an extrovert situation that it can make friends worry about your health. Maybe your battery is shot and needs to be replaced. Or maybe you forgot and left your wifi and bluetooth on to drain your battery as fast as it recharges.
You enjoy them, but don't thrive on them. It takes so long for you to recharge after an extrovert situation that it can make friends worry about your health. Maybe your battery is shot and needs to be replaced. Or maybe you forgot and left your wifi and bluetooth on to drain your battery as fast as it recharges.
You are spot-on when you say my battery takes an extra long time to recharge. I've been wanting to plan kind of an extroverted bonanza in the fall, and I'm already asking God for help in saving up my energy.
I guess it's because when I'm around people, and even here in the threads, I feel like I need to be "on." I need to be thinking of things to try to bring people together, start conversations, try to make people laugh after their long, exhausting, and sometimes very lonely days. My brain is always calculating, measuring, how to "say" things in written words: "No, it'll flow better if you rearrange these sentences here; it'll come across as more humorous if you make a pause there; it might be easier for people to read if you reword this paragraph in the middle."
In my head, I'm always thinking of how to "word" things, until it actually tumbles out onto the pages.
But as we are talking about in another thread, there is always a price to pay.
I can keep this up for a little while...
And then I crash out for months, because I need all my regular energy just for daily life.
Eventually, I will gradually nickel and dime any extra little tidbits of energy until I store up enough for another bull run.