Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 52,169
- MBTI Type
- BELF
- Enneagram
- 594
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
I agree. There can be a danger of spending so much time 'fixing' your weaknesses that you never develop your strengths. I suppose if a weakness bothers someone enough to complain a lot then it is worth fixing.
All my life people have tried to make me more outgoing and would offer up advice. I used to try and settled into a compromise of smiling a lot but saying little. It tended to just discourage me and added to self esteem issues. I no longer care at all about trying to be extroverted and only smile at people when I mean it. It is such a relief and there are many positive qualities I can develop that are naturally a part of my introversion. ðŸ¸
I dealt with that too -- feeling like I had to be more extroverted and social. It was something worth developing a bit, but not at the expense of my self-esteem and always feeling inadequate while not acknowledging the value of my quieter aspects. I no longer really feel like I have to be "on" or that I always have to be reaching out and initiating things.
Again, I did have to develop it a bit, and learn to be less passive and more initiating just to make "me" function better, but not to the point of becoming someone that I really am not. It really is a matter of figuring out who you really are over time and then being okay with it, even if there are some things you can become better at.