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- title: Hitting The Wall
- url: https://glyph.twistedmatrix.com/2016/09/hitting-the-wall.html
- hash_url: bee6c7038a9a47838ad362260a8339db
-
- <p>I’m an introvert.</p>
- <p>I say that with a full-on appreciation of
- <a href="http://the-toast.net/2014/11/10/sorry-murdered-everyone-im-introvert/">just how awful</a>
- thinkpieces on “introverts” are.</p>
- <p>However, I feel compelled to write about this today because of a certain type
- of social pressure that a certain type of introvert faces. Specifically, I am
- a <em>high-energy</em> introvert.</p>
- <p>Cementing this piece’s place in the hallowed halls of <em>just awful</em> thinkpieces,
- allow me to compare my mild cognitive fatigue with the plight of those
- suffering from chronic illness and disability<sup id="fnref:1"><a class="footnote-ref" href="#fn:1" rel="footnote">1</a></sup>. There’s a social phenomenon
- associated with many chronic illnesses,
- <a href="http://www.butyoudontlooksick.com">“but you don’t LOOK sick”</a>, where
- well-meaning people will look at someone who is suffering, with no obvious
- symptoms, and imply that they really <em>ought</em> to be able to “be normal”.</p>
- <p>As a high-energy introvert, I frequently participate in social events. I go to
- meet-ups and conferences and I engage in plenty of
- <a href="http://pyvideo.org/speaker/glyph.html">public speaking</a>. I am, in a sense,
- comfortable extemporizing in front of large groups of strangers.</p>
- <p>This all sounds like extroverted behavior, I know. But there’s a key
- difference.</p>
- <p>Let me posit two axes for personality type: on the X axis, “introvert” to
- “extrovert”, and on the Y, “low energy” up to “high energy”.</p>
- <p>The X axis describes <em>what kinds of activities give you energy</em>, and the Y axis
- describes <em>how large your energy reserves are for the other type</em>.</p>
- <p>Notice that I didn’t say which type of activity you <em>enjoy</em>.</p>
- <p>Most people who would self-describe as “introverts” are in the
- low-energy/introvert quadrant. They have a small amount of energy available
- for social activities, which they need to frequently re-charge by doing
- solitary activities. As a result of frequently running out of energy for
- social activities, they don’t <em>enjoy</em> social activities.</p>
- <p>Most people who would self-describe as “extroverts” are also on the
- “low-energy” end of the spectrum. They have low levels of patience for
- solitary activity, and need to re-charge by spending time with friends, going
- to parties, etc, in order to have the mental fortitude to sit still for a while
- and focus. Since they can endlessly get more energy from the company of
- others, they tend to enjoy social activities quite a bit.</p>
- <p>Therefore we have certain behaviors we expect to see from “introverts”. We
- expect them to be shy, and quiet, and withdrawn. When someone who behaves this
- way has to bail on a social engagement, this is expected. There’s a certain
- affordance for it. If you spend a few hours with them, they may be initially
- friendly but will visibly become uncomfortable and withdrawn.</p>
- <p>This “energy” model of personality is of course an oversimplification - it’s my
- personal belief that everyone needs some balance of privacy and socialization
- and solitude and eventually overdoing one or the other will be bad for anyone -
- but it’s a useful one.</p>
- <p>As a <em>high</em>-energy introvert, my behavior often confuses people. I’ll show up
- at a week’s worth of professional events, be the life of the party, go out to
- dinner at all of them, and then disappear for a month. I’m not visibily shy -
- quite the opposite, I’m a gregarious raconteur. In fact, I quite <em>visibly</em>
- enjoy the company of friends. So, usually, when I try to explain that I am
- quite introverted, this claim is met with (quite understandable) skepticism.</p>
- <p>In fact, I am quite functionally what society expects of an “extrovert” - until
- I hit the wall.</p>
- <hr />
- <p>In endurance sports, one is said to
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitting_the_wall">“hit the wall”</a> at the point
- where all the short-term energy reserves in one’s muscles are exhausted, and
- there is a sudden, dramatic loss of energy. Regardless, many people <em>enjoy</em>
- endurance sports; part of the challenge of them is properly managing your
- energy.</p>
- <p>This is true for me and social situations. I do <em>enjoy</em> social situations
- quite a bit! But they are nevertheless quite taxing for me, and without
- prolonged intermissions of solitude, eventually I get to the point where I can
- no longer behave as a normal social creature without an excruciating level of
- effort and anxiety.</p>
- <p>Several years ago, I attended a prolonged social event<sup id="fnref:2"><a class="footnote-ref" href="#fn:2" rel="footnote">2</a></sup> where I hit the
- wall, hard. The event itself was several hours too long for me, involved
- meeting lots of strangers, and in the lead-up to it I hadn’t had a weekend to
- myself for a few weeks due to work commitments and family stuff. Towards the
- end I noticed I was developing a completely
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduced_affect_display">flat affect</a>, and had to
- start very consciously performing even basic body language, like looking at
- someone while they were talking or smiling. I’d never been so exhausted and
- numb in my life; at the time I thought I was just stressed from work.</p>
- <p>Afterwards though, I started having a lot of weird nightmares,
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashback_(psychology)">even during the daytime</a>.
- This concerned me, since I’d never had such a severe reaction to a social
- situation, and I didn’t have good language to describe it. It was also a
- little perplexing that what was effectively a nice party, the first half of
- which had even been fun for me, would cause such a persistent negative reaction
- after the fact. After some research, I eventually discovered that such
- involuntary thoughts are
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posttraumatic_stress_disorder">a hallmark of PTSD</a>.</p>
- <p>While I’ve managed to avoid this level of exhaustion before or since, this was
- a real learning experience for me that the consequences of incorrectly managing
- my level of social interaction can be quite severe.</p>
- <p>I’d rather not do that again.</p>
- <hr />
- <p>The reason I’m writing this, though<sup id="fnref:3"><a class="footnote-ref" href="#fn:3" rel="footnote">3</a></sup>, is not to avoid future anxiety. My
- social energy reserves are quite large enough, and I now have enough
- self-knowledge, that it is extremely unlikely I’d ever find myself in that
- situation again.</p>
- <p>The reason I’m writing is to help people understand that <em>I’m not blowing them
- off because I don’t like them</em>. Many times now, I’ve declined or bailed an
- invitation from someone, and later heard that they felt hurt that I was
- passive-aggressively refusing to be friendly.</p>
- <p>I certainly understand this reaction. After all, if you see someone at a party
- and they’re clearly having a great time and chatting with everyone, but then
- when <em>you</em> invite them to do something, they say “sorry, too much social
- stuff”, that seems like a pretty passive-aggressive way to respond.</p>
- <p>You might even still be skeptical after reading this. “Glyph, if you were
- <em>really</em> an introvert, surely, I would have seen you looking a <em>little</em> shy and
- withdrawn. Surely I’d see <em>some</em> evidence of stage fright before your talks.”</p>
- <p>But that’s exactly the problem here: no, you wouldn’t.</p>
- <p>At a social event, since I have lots of energy to begin with, I’ll build up a
- head of steam on burning said energy that no low-energy introvert would ever
- risk. If I were to run out of social-interaction-juice, I’d be in the middle
- of a big crowd telling a long and elaborate story when I find myself exhausted.
- If I hit the wall in that situation, I can’t feel a little awkward and make
- excuses and leave; I’ll be stuck creepily faking a smile like a sociopath and
- frantically looking for a way out of the converstaion for an hour, as the
- pressure from a large crowd of people rapidly builds up months worth of
- nightmare fuel from my spiraling energy deficit.</p>
- <p>Given that I know that’s what’s going to happen, <em>you won’t see me</em> when I’m
- close to that line. You won’t be in at my desk when I silently sit and type
- for a whole day, or on my couch when I quietly read a book for ten hours at a
- time. My solitary side is, by definition, hidden.</p>
- <p>But, if I don’t show up to your party, I promise: it’s not you, it’s me.</p>
- <div class="footnote">
- <hr />
- <ol>
- <li id="fn:1">
- <p>In all seriousness: this is a comparison of <em>kind</em> and not of <em>degree</em>.
- I absolutely do not have any illusions that my minor mental issues are a
- serious disability. They are - by definition, since I do not have a
- diagnosis - subclinical. I am describing a minor annoyance and frequent
- miscommunication in this post, not a personal tragedy. <a class="footnote-backref" href="#fnref:1" rev="footnote" title="Jump back to footnote 1 in the text">↩</a></p>
- </li>
- <li id="fn:2">
- <p>I’ll try to keep this anonymous, so hopefully you can’t guess - I don’t
- want to make anyone feel bad about this, since it was my poor
- time-management and not their (lovely!) event which caused the problem. <a class="footnote-backref" href="#fnref:2" rev="footnote" title="Jump back to footnote 2 in the text">↩</a></p>
- </li>
- <li id="fn:3">
- <p>... aside from the hope that maybe someone else has had trouble
- explaining the same thing, and this will be a useful resource for them ... <a class="footnote-backref" href="#fnref:3" rev="footnote" title="Jump back to footnote 3 in the text">↩</a></p>
- </li>
- </ol>
- </div>
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