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    Joined: Nov 2012
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    est1215 Offline OP
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    HowlerKarma, you are describing her extremely well:)
    You're right, her behavior is not a concern to her. I've told her that she's missing out if she behaves like that and she just laughs at me in a "yeah right" kind of way. She says she's very happy being by herself at times. And yes, she does cut loose with people she knows well and at home. It's hilarious how different she is.

    I find Dudes observation very interesting. From the time she was just a few weeks old my daughter would "lose it" if a stranger would pick her up. Once she was a few months old, she didn't even like strangers looking at her from a close range. My younger child was the total opposite. Never cared who picked him up or held him or talked to him. And he can still approach and strike up a conversation with anybody, anywhere, anytime.

    My DD is just too serious most of the time. She absolutely despises singing and dancing, she thinks it's embarrassing and is refusing to do it. Any kind of holiday concerts or classroom dance/singing activities where participating is not optional, is downright embarrassing for me to watch, because she sticks out like sore thumb by just standing there. And the teachers might take it as if she's stubborn, when in reality she just can't make herself do it because for her it's debilitatingly embarrassing. Now she can step out on a stage in front of hundreds of people and perform on one of her instruments without even flinching or perform a theatrical skit in front of the classroom with no problem. It does not make sense to me.
    So should I just let her be? Is she missing out without knowing it herself? Is this behavior holding her back and reaching her potential? Is it going to get worse if I don't intervene?

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    Originally Posted by est1215
    It does not make sense to me.
    So should I just let her be? Is she missing out without knowing it herself? Is this behavior holding her back and reaching her potential? Is it going to get worse if I don't intervene?

    It makes perfect sense to me. If you know all the rules for the context, and are confident you can perform in the confines of the role as specified... that's easy.

    I'd say there's nothing to worry about, and she probably isn't missing out versus her own perception of her needs. Luckily, we grow up to be great facilitators, sensitive and respected managers, great friends (to the few who are let in), etc. It's a different potential.

    If you want to help along the path, things I would've found helpful:
    1) Go people watching with her, like at a mall or a park. Discuss the people you are observing, speculate on what they are thinking, etc.
    2) A big epiphany was realizing that despite being social and talking and interacting, other people may also be observant; i.e. she could work on exposing small emotes even from the sidelines to indicate she is aware/following/understanding... A slight nod, a head tilt, glancing up in thought, a sub-vocal huh.
    3) Make sure she has enough opportunities to interact with strangers in defined contexts, e.g. ordering at a restaurant, talking to a librarian, etc.
    4) Explain about extraverts/introverts and that some extraverts have to "think" out loud. And that extraverts imagine introverts must be lonely and are usually trying to be helpful when they invade.
    5) And never have the "what's the worse thing that can happen?" discussion when dealing with potential embarassment.

    ...and I've got an extravert DS7 who walks right into a store and tells the employee exactly what we are looking for and why we want it, etc. while I'm the deer in the headlights... not sure which is trickier the introvert parent with extravert kid or vice versa...

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