Rise of the Introvert and Fall of the Extrovert in the current COVID ’ 19 crisis

How many times have you felt the need, the urge, and the desire to just sleep on your bed and keep looking at the ceiling? Then stare at the fan while working through your nails. Just stay indoors for hours with the TV remote in your hand and keep glancing at the TV screen as you flip through channels without a rational reason as if something will magically emerge from it. Have only one or two people to confide to and discuss your problems as that is how you see life as a problem and others should solve that problem for you…. When have you last had a conversation with a stranger without putting your head down and a fake/ awkward smile to take away that so-called awkward encounter that you experience whenever you see into the eye of a new person?  How you feel so socially awkward if in a room full of strangers and want to just go back to your room and lock yourself and read a book. Basically felt the need to reason your mind in order to attain strength to action/ face people. When you have either put up a smile to or even a frown to cover your actual feelings of insecurity, jealously, low confidence and primarily low self-esteem/self-worth The above qualities highlight the life of an introvert in terms of day to day affairs. Now let’s please understand there is a big difference between a highly intelligent person, an introvert and an extrovert. A highly intelligent person can be social when need be and be a recluse when need be.  The...
Source: PickTheBrain | Motivation and Self Improvement - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: featured psychology relationships self-improvement covid covid_19 extrovert introvert pickthebrain Source Type: blogs