Attreyu
Member
- Local time
- Today 12:08 AM
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2015
- Messages
- 35
(A little preface)
There seems to be an ideological epidemic in modern medicine, with a tendency to conveniently confuse symptom and cause, in such a subtle way that makes it look like there is troubleshooting involved, but in reality keeps the pharmaceutical money machine turning ... by treating symptoms we never truly cure and thus become dependent in alchemy.
(Now on to the topic)
Looking at the introversion notion; it is sometimes made to sound like a disease of sorts, but is it possible (just possible) that it is not really a fundamental characteristic at all, but a mere symptomatic adaptation that happened in our adolescent brains at some point out of reaction to the environment ?
For instance, I remember as a kid, I always wanted to be out and interact with the other kids (I enjoyed and looked forward to it for a while) ... but given a very strict upbringing that involved a lot of "old-style" discipline of various forms (including forced isolation; from the sins of the world), I developed social anxiety to the point of stuttering when speaking. Eventually my brain realized, that I was being judged by the other kids because of it, which added to the anxiety and compound the problem. Ended up avoiding social interactions and becoming increasingly comfortable in isolation and self reflection and by doing so I was missing out on sports and other activities that help a young brain grow. My subconscious was making correct observations of how far behind I was falling compared to the norm and that triggered a self esteem downward spiral.
In the bottom line, I have this suspicion that introversion is a learned behavior (not an inherent one), and that deep down inside we all crave communication; with the appropriate set of select people. There have been times among an intellectual non-judgmental group of people that I felt quite energized for hours on end and was looking for more later, yet most other times I tend to avoid talking mostly because subconsciously I don't perceive enough intellectual compatibility to begin with.
As it stands now, I don't see introversion any more ... just self-consciousness from people whose self esteem eroded away at some point in their lives.
Your thoughts ? Aren't we being extroverted merely by being here to this forum, or even coming back to this forum ?
There seems to be an ideological epidemic in modern medicine, with a tendency to conveniently confuse symptom and cause, in such a subtle way that makes it look like there is troubleshooting involved, but in reality keeps the pharmaceutical money machine turning ... by treating symptoms we never truly cure and thus become dependent in alchemy.
(Now on to the topic)
Looking at the introversion notion; it is sometimes made to sound like a disease of sorts, but is it possible (just possible) that it is not really a fundamental characteristic at all, but a mere symptomatic adaptation that happened in our adolescent brains at some point out of reaction to the environment ?
For instance, I remember as a kid, I always wanted to be out and interact with the other kids (I enjoyed and looked forward to it for a while) ... but given a very strict upbringing that involved a lot of "old-style" discipline of various forms (including forced isolation; from the sins of the world), I developed social anxiety to the point of stuttering when speaking. Eventually my brain realized, that I was being judged by the other kids because of it, which added to the anxiety and compound the problem. Ended up avoiding social interactions and becoming increasingly comfortable in isolation and self reflection and by doing so I was missing out on sports and other activities that help a young brain grow. My subconscious was making correct observations of how far behind I was falling compared to the norm and that triggered a self esteem downward spiral.
In the bottom line, I have this suspicion that introversion is a learned behavior (not an inherent one), and that deep down inside we all crave communication; with the appropriate set of select people. There have been times among an intellectual non-judgmental group of people that I felt quite energized for hours on end and was looking for more later, yet most other times I tend to avoid talking mostly because subconsciously I don't perceive enough intellectual compatibility to begin with.
As it stands now, I don't see introversion any more ... just self-consciousness from people whose self esteem eroded away at some point in their lives.
Your thoughts ? Aren't we being extroverted merely by being here to this forum, or even coming back to this forum ?