her, and so does everyone else, once they get to know her. So why does
Emily withdraw?
This question, for Greg, is more than mere pique. Being alone for him
is a kind of Kryptonite; it makes him feel weak. He had looked forward
to a married life of shared adventures. He’d imagined being part of a
couple at the center of things. And he’d never admitted it to himself, but
for him being married meant never having to be by himself. But now
Emily is saying that he should socialize without her. He feels as if she’s
backing out of a fundamental part of their marriage contract. And he
believes that something is indeed wrong with his wife.
Is something wrong with me?
It’s not surprising that Emily asks herself this
question, or that Greg aims this charge at her. Probably the most
common—and damaging—misunderstanding
about personality type is
that introverts are antisocial and extroverts are pro-social. But as we’ve
seen, neither formulation is correct; introverts and extroverts are
differently
social. What psychologists call “the need for intimacy” is
present in introverts and extroverts alike. In fact,
people who value
intimacy highly don’t tend to be, as the noted psychologist David Buss
puts it, “the loud, outgoing, life-of-the-party extrovert.” They are more
likely to be someone with a select group of close friends, who prefers
“sincere and meaningful conversations over wild parties.” They are more
likely to be someone like Emily.
Conversely, extroverts do not necessarily
seek closeness from their
socializing. “Extroverts seem to need people as a forum to fill needs for
social impact, just as a general needs soldiers to fill his or her need to
lead,” the psychologist William Graziano told me. “When extroverts
show up at a party, everyone knows they are present.”
Your degree of extroversion seems to influence how many friends you
have, in other words, but not how good a friend you are. In a study of
132 college students at Humboldt University in Berlin, the psychologists
Jens Aspendorf and Susanne Wilpers set out to understand the effect of
different personality traits on students’ relationships with their peers and
families. They focused on the so-called Big Five traits: Introversion-
Extroversion; Agreeableness; Openness to Experience; Conscientiousness;
and Emotional Stability. (Many personality
psychologists believe that
human personality can be boiled down to these five characteristics.)
Aspendorf and Wilpers predicted that the extroverted students would
have an easier time striking up new friendships than the introverts, and
this was indeed the case. But if the introverts were truly antisocial and
extroverts pro-social, then you’d suppose that the students with the most
harmonious relationships would also be highest in extroversion. And this
was not the case at all. Instead, the students whose relationships were
freest of conflict had high scores for agreeableness. Agreeable people are
warm, supportive, and loving; personality psychologists have found that
if you sit them down in front of a computer screen of words, they focus
longer than others do on words like
caring, console
, and
help
, and a
shorter time on words like
abduct, assault
, and
harass
.
Introverts and
extroverts are equally likely to be agreeable; there is no correlation
between extroversion and agreeableness.
This explains why some
extroverts love the stimulation of socializing but don’t get along
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