Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Silence is Golden

It is a rare occasion that a Facebook post will deeply move me. It happened today.

Over the past few years, I have been thinking a lot about navigating the social boundaries of others and how to communicate my own personal boundary expectations. Throughout my life, I have had the pleasure of meeting a handful of those special people with which I have had instant rapport. Those encounters are the exception to the rule. Most of my relationships are a series of awkward interactions until I can find common ground with a new person. As a born introvert, I have had to work very hard to express my inner thoughts in a verbal way. I am told that as a child I didn’t even speak to my own grandmother until I could form full sentences. I’ve known some people to perceive me as dumb, snobby, or meek upon first impression. These misperceptions don’t bother me because when I do speak… I have learned that it packs more punch.

While perusing my Facebook feed, I was drawn to an article posted by a high school acquaintance. She graduated a year ahead of me and exhibited some of the same introvert behaviors as myself. We were never close, but based on her social media posts, we should have been. We did spend one week of summer camp in the same cabin, and unbeknownst to the adolescent me, she is wicked smart and would become a talented photographer and educator.

What struck me most about the article was not the surface content, but the conclusions I drew from it. Since when did it become okay to ask complete strangers deeply personal questions?

Maybe… I can’t have children.
Maybe… I like cats better than humans.
Maybe… I will never find the right ‘man’.
Maybe… I got laid off and am waiting to find a new source of income.
Maybe… I love something different.
Maybe… I have a greater capacity to love than you.

I would never casually ask an acquaintance about their divorce / family history of mental illness / how many people they’ve slept with. How is it okay for people to judge me based on my marriage status or lack of children? It’s one thing to have close personal friends and family ask these questions, but when your coworkers and casual acquaintances start giving you a sales pitch on how to live your life, it’s time to give them the keys to the street... and do it tonight.

Regardless of your personal beliefs, every human soul has a unique experience. I have known so many amazing role models in my life.

Some are old.
Some are young.
Some are women.
Some are men.
Some have children.
Some don’t have children.

You can never force your own experiences on someone else. In the words of my all time favorite naïve character, Dirk Diggler, ‘It’s just not sexy.”

Before you ask that inappropriate question, think of what your introvert friends would do.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n03g8nsaBro


Silence is golden.