I love that title 'in a world that cant stop talking' looks like a good book Im glad you really enjoyed the books too.Can I come lurk in this thread? I'm an extrovert (and fully aware of the flaws that accompany that - I'm not going to be offended by anything said here!) but my husband is an introvert, and I love, love, love him for it.
There are so many strengths that introverts bring to relationships, or to the workplace, or to the church, which extroverts sadly tend to overlook. You generally think before you speak so are less likely to accidentally say something hurtful. You're better at staying focussed in a conversation, so when you say something it's relevant. Also, when you say something it tends to be worth listening to because you've spent some time processing it, which extroverts rarely do. We just blurt out whatever inane thoughts come into our heads (and yes, they're often about ourselves).
I hate when my husband comes home from the office dejected because he's been told again that he's "too quiet" or needs to "contribute more to the social life of the office", as though his introversion is some kind of defect. (When in actual fact, it's a strength.) It's just lazy thinking and a reluctance to change the status quo that makes people embrace extroversion as some kind of ideal.
Anyway, I don't have any articles to link to, but I read two really great books recently that some of you guys might be interested in - 'Introverts in the Church' by Adam McHugh (written by an introvert about how the church is geared towards extroverts, to its own detriment) and 'Quiet - the power of introverts in a world that can't stop talking' by Susan Cain.
Sorry for my verbosity! :/
Upvote
0
It doesn't help that we introverts are so in the minority, too. 