Either you are extrovert or introvert, and so I am an introvert in that sense. I'm not a social person that wants to go to parties.
For an interesting nonfiction read, I really enjoyed 'Quiet' by Susan Cain. I read it with my husband, who is a true introvert, whereas I am an introvert masquerading as an extrovert.
In an extroverted society, the difference between an introvert and an extrovert is that an introvert is often unconsciously deemed guilty until proven innocent.
I am who I am. I am not very complicated. I am simple and an introvert.
When I left for college, I told myself that this was a chance for reinvention. No one on the other side of the country knew that I was an introvert, so maybe if I tried not acting like an introvert, I wouldn't be one.
If the extrovert is trying to "cheer up" the introvert - extroverts are programmed to seek social rewards! - he or she may feel like a failure if the introvert remains unmoved.
I am an introvert; privately I am very shy, and I don't speak unless I have to.
I am neither an introvert nor an extrovert. I am somewhere in the middle.
I do give interviews, but I am generally media-shy because I am an introvert by nature.
I think Hamlet, as much as he loves his privacy and is kind of an introvert, he's a very functional introvert. When he has to be out, he can be out with people.
As a person, I am an introvert.
I am the dictionary meaning of the word introvert.
I was very introverted. I am still an introvert.
I am an introvert. I should get that out there now.
The inquiry "who am I" turns the mind introvert and makes it calm.
Theatre is something that keeps me very alert, and I am actively creating whether I am on stage or directing. In films, I feel I become more of an introvert, going deeper in the realism of a character.