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Understanding Your Introverted Teen




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For most of my life, I've felt hopelessly weird, said Heather,

an introvert in her early thirties. Like I don't really fit in.

I've learned how to fool some of the people some of the time -

there are those who swear I can't possibly be introverted - but

I know better. Solitude and reading time are like oxygen for me;

and too much time spent with other people (especially talkative

sorts) is draining.



Heather struggled with being an introvert in her teen years and

has been coming to terms with it more as a young adult. Shes

not alone. Being a teen can be stressful and even more so for

introverts, who have to withstand all the social pressures of a

typical high school day which are exhausting to introverts and

of no intrinsic value.



For some of us, high school was a long time ago! We can

understand the needs of introverted teens better and support

them in growth on their own terms by going back for a moment to

look at the high school years and the demands that are made on

teens beyond the academic.



Most high schools are set up to please extroverts, who are the

majority of the population 3:1. Introverts may find a typical

day overcrowded, over stimulating, noisy, oppressive and

stressful. The lunch room seems to be a particularly awful

experience. Introverted teens suffer from an almost total lack

of privacy as well.



We decided to get asked a group of introverts how they felt

about high school. Here are some replies.



1.High school was better than grade school because there was

more individualness to the curriculum. I remember wanting to be

alone at lunch time, even though I had friends to sit with, but

there was no excuse to get away from people. Sometimes I'd go to

the library to pretend to work on projects in the quiet, or I'd

walk in the halls (I went to a huge school) and pretend I was

walking somewhere, just for a moment alone.



2.Hated it. It was noisy and there always seemed to be an

element of danger in the air. The teenage stage of human

development is probably the most dangerous. If teens had access

to nukes, we'd all be doomed! LOL.



3.Loved high school. Gave me a greater opportunity to be a

nerd. Loved carting all those books around. Instead of getting

my books from my locker as I needed them, I got all the books

I'd need first thing in the morning and get rid of them as I no

longer needed them. If there was homework assigned for a class,

I carried that book all day, and usually got through all the

homework before I actually had to take it home.



4.I liked studying and reading but I did not interact with my

peers because by that age, everyone seemed to have made up their

mind that I was much too different and weird so I remained

alone.



5.I can't say that I did like it - it was really just a job to

me. I needed to get great grades because there was no money for

college. So I tracked myself into the academic side and wound up

in Honors and AP classes. I became Editor of the newspaper which

was a big deal since the paper had a tradition of winning a lot

of regional and national journalism awards. I edited the

literary magazine, helped with the yearbook, and did a lot of

debate. Basically, if I thought it would look good for college I

did it if it wasn't completely horrible like the Prom Committee.

Teachers liked me. Other students just ignored me. I had some

friends and I dated guys who went to other schools. Really any

social life I had involved kids who were high academic achievers

both in my own school and at other high schools. We all knew

each other from debate, chess club, academic competitions or

whatever. Frankly, probably more than half of these kids were

introverts so there wasn't a lot of pressure to conform to a

"peer group". A lot of the normal stuff of high school just flew

under my radar. I couldn't get involved in the status dressing

thing - no money. I couldn't get involved in the drink or drug

until you puke thing - no money, looked stupid. I couldn't get

involved in the high end sex thing - pregnancy would have

absolutely ended my college ambitions. So I stayed out of

trouble and had a fairly okay time.



6.High school was fine. I had a small group of friends, but

preferred to be alone on the weekends. I was always the quiet

one in the group.



7.I hated high school with a passion. I should have been home

schooled. I was too sensitive and introverted to be thrown into

the lions den. My elementary school never really prepared me for

studies like geometry and I had parents that were busy and too

permissive. So not having the help I needed to get over my math

learning disability (discaculia) I rebelled with drugs to escape

the pain of having to socialize and study.



8.I hated the immaturity of the other students. They made other

student's business their business and I thought that was not

only immature but antisocial and destructive. I hated high

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school because it didn't address the complete person. I wanted

to know the map of the human psyche. I wanted to learn about

human behavior and take it apart under a microscope.



9.Please tell me it gets better from here. I'm still in it, if

that clarifies anything. I hate everyone here. No, I mean

everyone. There's maybe a few people I don't altogether hate,

but only a few. It's pretty depressing really, being surrounded

by 2000 kids my own age and I can't make a single friend. Oh

well, college will be better. Hopefully...



10.I was a band geek and an AP English student. I think I ate in

the cafeteria once for lunch the whole three years of high

school, because I could never find anyone to sit with and it was

easier to starve than go sit in there. Eventually I got to hang

out in the band office during lunch. Did theater and speech team

and French Club and the Literary magazine. Never had any really

good friends though until the last year.



Now youve heard it from the horses mouth. Introverted teens

find little value in extraneous socializing. Homeroom, clubs,

dances, prom committees and most of all the dreaded lunchroom

are annoying and exhausting to introverts. When they get home,

the favored activity is reading or other quiet pursuits.



The exception may be academic clubs which tend to contain more

intelligent students. With a rise in intelligence, the ratio of

introverts rises as well. Studies have shown that the

proportions almost reverse themselves among Rhodes Scholars and

Phi Beta Kappas. Many of the more academic groups and committees

are run by and for introverts and can be satisfying to

participate in.



Introverts also prefer private projects (art, creative, musical

instrument) and will often choose to pursue these in their time

off.



Some introverts are comfortable with their personality type even

in high school. We were struck with those who made the best of

it, humorously or otherwise, but we personally identified with

those who walked the halls for a moment of privacy and who

didnt eat because they couldnt handle the dynamics of the

lunch room.



When your introverted teen gets home, he or she may need time

alone to fill back up again. In fact, one of the greatest gifts

we can give an introvert of any age is a room of their own with

a door that closes!



Lets take a look at what some of the introverts on the survey

said they liked to do when they got home from high school every

day. Some of the answers may surprise you.



1."Eat or watch TV."



2."Every so often talk on the phone with a friend, but otherwise

make my own dinner, watch some TV or listen to folk and protest

music and/or teach myself to play the guitar, and do some

homework."



3."Sort out my homework, then do some reading"



4."By this time my sister was more self-sufficient so I'd

usually go to my bedroom, watch TV, write and daydream. I spent

A LOT of my time inside my head."



5."I spent a lot of time by myself outside of the sport and

school activities I tried to get people to be friends with."



6."Read"



7."I by then was very organized and fast at completing chores,

so I had time to paint and write."



8."Babysit my little brother, make dinner... the usual."



9."I have been sleeping a lot after school. I'm an introverted

kid, and I used to feel bad about wanting to sleep after school

cause I was so tired, but now I feel better. I play the clarinet

now, so I practice that and read."



10."Got a snack and took a nap. I DESPISED high school."



11."Cry, eat"



12."Practiced my saxophone. Drew pictures. Went overboard on any

creative projects the teachers gave me. Like, we were supposed

to do an introduction to an epic poem in rhyming couplets. Mine

was ten pages, and a whole rhyming couplet version of what

happened after the end of "the Phantom of the Opera." The book,

not the musical. In history we made children's books, and I was

the first one the teacher ever gave a perfect score to because

mine was fully illustrated and had doors and windows that opened

to pictures underneath."



13."Since I'm in high school thats easy, I go home and watch an

hour of Sliders and then I usually read homework or my book for

fun and go on the internet."



Please understand how stressful a high school day can be for

your introverted teen. Give him or her the privacy and quiet

time desired when they get home in the afternoon and, if

possible, a room of their own with a door that closes!



Above all, appreciate the ability of the introverted teen to

stand alone. In plain English, this means their ability to

withstand the peer pressures of drugs, alcohol, smoking and

premarital sex are practically ironclad.



This is what one introvert said, I was the nerdiest goody two

shoes in high school you could possibly imagine. I was so shy I

dont think I spoke to anyone the whole four years. But in a

way, boys like that kind of girl, thinking they can push you

around I suppose. So I got asked out a lot. Anyway, I had one

guy try to force me to take a drink of wine. He simply could not

believe it when I said no and meant it. Since I didnt care what

anyone thought about me anyway, it was easy. I thought he was

pathetic to even try!



Introverts dont have the normal extroverted teens craving to

be part of the group. On some level, most of them know it isnt

going in that direction anyway. Introverts are also well ahead

of the game in knowing who they are. Some of the those

interviewed mentioned a focus on getting into college or making

good grades and were not tempted to get off track by pursuing

activities of less mature classmates.



Last but not least, your introverted teen may not be susceptible

to peer pressure where things like drugs and sex are concerned.

Next time you see him or her hiding out at the internet, you

can thank your lucky stars for the introverts innate self

reliance.



About the author:

Nancy R. Fenn is The IntrovertZCoach. Her mission in life is to

raise consciousness about introversion as a legitimate

personality type.



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