Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a big company holiday party last night. I didn’t go but didn’t decline because I’m an introvert. I RSVP’d no without any comments because I didn’t want to go. Most of my colleagues weren’t going for a variety of reasons, but overall because they had other things they would rather be doing. No one gave being an introvert as a reason.
I could see OP being one of the people who loves the work social events and thinking all of us are rude introverts.
Or, one of the people who thinks it's rude if people don't get validation from running through a "cheer line" of clapping managers at a mandatory work "appreciation" event or if people don't want to dress up for Halloween and trick-or-treat at each other's cubes.
this. I’m an introvert not I’m still social. People just know that 3 hours is generally my max for any type of event though.Anonymous wrote:It is rude to not respond to greetings, or to say snide things, to complain about how other people celebrate the holidays. It isn’t rude to decline party invitations, not participate in the cookie exchange, or leave a party early after giving all the energy they have to give. What exactly are you experiencing, OP?
Anonymous wrote:We had a big company holiday party last night. I didn’t go but didn’t decline because I’m an introvert. I RSVP’d no without any comments because I didn’t want to go. Most of my colleagues weren’t going for a variety of reasons, but overall because they had other things they would rather be doing. No one gave being an introvert as a reason.
I could see OP being one of the people who loves the work social events and thinking all of us are rude introverts.
Anonymous wrote:Most over used words on DCUM: Introvert, anxiety, and divorce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I understand that American culture was built by and for extroverts, and that it can be exhausting. However, I’m a little annoyed when I see people point to their introversion as a reason to not participate, not be polite or even not to interact. It seems more like an excuse to act like a jerk than a legitimate characteristic, in some scenarios.
Sometimes introverts are rude. Sometimes extroverts are rude. Neither has a monopoly.
This.
There's no correlation between introversion and rudeness, any more than there's a correlation between extroversion and rudeness. Some people are just rude, period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I understand that American culture was built by and for extroverts, and that it can be exhausting. However, I’m a little annoyed when I see people point to their introversion as a reason to not participate, not be polite or even not to interact. It seems more like an excuse to act like a jerk than a legitimate characteristic, in some scenarios.
Sometimes introverts are rude. Sometimes extroverts are rude. Neither has a monopoly.
Anonymous wrote:I understand that American culture was built by and for extroverts, and that it can be exhausting. However, I’m a little annoyed when I see people point to their introversion as a reason to not participate, not be polite or even not to interact. It seems more like an excuse to act like a jerk than a legitimate characteristic, in some scenarios.