โMar-17-2018 03:03 PM
โMar-18-2018 04:07 PM
toedtoes wrote:
I'm not really sold on the personality types - they come across more like astrology in that you can find some identified traits in any category that fit, but no category fits everything.
I don't remember where I heard it, but there is a definition of intovert that says you are introverted if you recharge by getting away from people and you are extroverted if you recharge by being around people. All the other concepts of introvert and extrovert; like not being the center of attention, being the life of the party, etc.; don't really have anything to do with it. It's simply how you recharge. I think that makes more sense than all the personality types that try to categorize the basic range of human behaviors into finite types.
It's an interesting subject though.
โMar-18-2018 04:07 PM
โMar-18-2018 02:37 PM
โMar-18-2018 02:30 PM
โMar-18-2018 01:53 PM
โMar-18-2018 12:33 PM
โMar-18-2018 12:25 PM
brianosaur wrote:Fizz wrote:
People who like to "Socialize" are people who like to talk, yak, yak, yak.
Eventually get around to their second cousins hernia operation.
You can argue this out and you probably will, being a social person.
That's like saying people who don't like to "socialize" are creepy weird hermit loners who's anti-social behavior makes it impossible for them to carry on a normal adult conversation in polite society. Pretty much Uni-bomber types.
Yeah, neither statement is sensible or realistic.
โMar-18-2018 12:22 PM
โMar-18-2018 11:54 AM
โMar-18-2018 11:35 AM
โMar-18-2018 11:31 AM
Fizz wrote:
People who like to "Socialize" are people who like to talk, yak, yak, yak.
Eventually get around to their second cousins hernia operation.
You can argue this out and you probably will, being a social person.
โMar-18-2018 11:20 AM
โMar-18-2018 10:21 AM
โMar-18-2018 09:54 AM
seagrace wrote:I thought the same thing about where the people are located, I could see someone from a crowed Eastern area wanting to get away from it all. The Midwest is a lot more sparsely populated.
Some interesting comments here. I wonder if some of it has to do with where you are from - as in, east coast, not a lot of solitary camping opportunities from what I hear. I grew up in the west, where I can drive a few miles out of town, find a road and camp.
I have my friends that I camp with remotely. I also camp solo remotely. Sometimes, when necessary, I will camp in a campground, but I've found they are generally too crowded and noisy, which is not what I am after when camping. I don't mind meeting people when I am in these kinds of campgrounds, and socializing, but when it's over I want my space back.
The description of State Parks in PA reminds of a recent stop at an AZ State Park - Patagonia Lake. It is a very popular park and I camped there as it was a place in the state I've never been. Kids playing noisily all day, not really a problem, full hookups, so many people had string lights out all over the place and just left them on all night long. Don't get that. It's not Christmas, and even then I turn my lights off at midnight.