I am well aware that in American society (United States) extrovert is 'preferred'. Children are encouraged from an early age to be bubbly and outgoing; if you're quiet and keep to yourself it's just seen as 'weird'/'awkward' and that something is wrong (you're sad, lonely, and/or depressed).
Having an introvert personality is seen as something bad, and you're forced to be something you're not if you're introvert. This frustrates me to no end, because introverts don't force extroverts to be introvert, so extroverts shouldn't force introverts to be outgoing.
I realize at times it's necessary to be extrovert, but there is so much silent stigma for being introvert; that there's something wrong with you.
I see this attitude even in the church. The church slogan is 'we accept you as you are' but the people that are prized the most are those who are bubbly and gregarious, and always being encouraging and always spouting a font of blessings.
However there is more to being encouraging than just giving somebody a 'pep talk' for lack of a better term.
Having an introvert personality is seen as something bad, and you're forced to be something you're not if you're introvert. This frustrates me to no end, because introverts don't force extroverts to be introvert, so extroverts shouldn't force introverts to be outgoing.
I realize at times it's necessary to be extrovert, but there is so much silent stigma for being introvert; that there's something wrong with you.
I see this attitude even in the church. The church slogan is 'we accept you as you are' but the people that are prized the most are those who are bubbly and gregarious, and always being encouraging and always spouting a font of blessings.
However there is more to being encouraging than just giving somebody a 'pep talk' for lack of a better term.