Beyond Introvert/Extrovert: The Power of Situational Personalities
We love labels. They’re neat, they’re tidy, and they save us from doing the messy work of actually understanding people. “Oh, she’s an introvert.” “He’s such an extrovert.” As if one word could sum up the maddening complexity of human behaviour. But life has a way of blowing holes in these categories. The so-called “introvert” who avoids office chatter suddenly becomes the life of the party at a cousin’s wedding. The “extrovert” who thrives in meetings freezes into awkward silence at a dinner table of strangers. Which is it? The truth is we don’t have one personality—we have many, shaped and triggered by the situations we find ourselves in. Psychologists call this situational personality, but anyone with a social life already knows it intuitively. You act differently with your boss than with your childhood friends. You reveal one version of yourself on social media and another in private. It isn’t hypocrisy—it’s adaptability. Yet society clings to the introvert/extrovert binary as if i...