I posted the next part of one of my favorite posts, following yesterday’s, Introversion is not the opposite of extroversion.
I call it part 3 there because I had to break part 1 into two parts to meet length requirements.
Enjoy!
If you believe you have to be either introverted or extroverted—as I did—this series of posts may revolutionize your life.
Related Posts:
- 150: Tom Murphy, part 1: Do the Math, the language of nature (transcript) Everybody thinks about the environment. Nearly everyone also gets bogged down in questions. Will this or that change make a…
- 144: Nikole Beckwith, part 1: Education and leadership (transcript) Nikole Beckwith is a celebrated director of playwright and more in Hollywood, on Broadway. Her movie Stockholm, Pennsylvania premiered at…
- 016: Daniel Gefen, Conversation 1 transcript Daniel and I had an unscripted, unguarded, very vulnerable conversation. It's not often that two men on an Internet chat…
- 132: Lorna Davis, part 1: C-suites and B-corps (transcript) This is a long episode but if you care about business, business school students wish they had access to global…
2 responses on “Psychology Today: Introversion is not the opposite of extroversion, part 2”