I know a lot of people who use humour to deflect their anxiety which often ironically makes them a focal point in a group. facepalm lol.
I think beat/opaline/...I can't remember what name you're currently using B :idontknow: lol sorry. But she made a very very good point somewhere else in the thread about the distinction between social anxiety and personality. well worth the going back and reading.
Is this what you're referring to?
"Just a guess but some of the people answering "introvert" might be extroverted with social anxiety (as the OP said about herself). Introversion is a personality type and introverts are not necessarily anxious. I know introverts who socialize just fine but need alone time, etc. SA can't cause introversion, only the illusion of such, which, in some cases, could be hiding a person's true socialization mode (extroversion or ambiversion).
I think I'm an anxious ambivert, since I have a few traits from both types when I'm comfortable but anxiety makes me appear introverted."
If so, I'm not convinced. A few people have taken me for an extrovert at social events, a "social butterfly" even, I'm looking forward to attending a party tomorrow actually. Looking back over my teens, for the most part, I was very outspoken at times, in some classes, even the class clown, and probably would have believed myself to be an extrovert at the time if I had even heard of those expressions, the same goes for college, but I'm not, I'm an introvert. Absolutely. Socializing, while it can be fun at the time, drains my energy. Im not sure that people have misconceptions of what introversion is? It's true that not all introverts are socially anxious, but I don't know that the reverse is true...
Perhaps I am getting too wrapped up in my own experience, but I truly cannot see how one can be extroverted with social anxiety disorder... But then, I suppose, I am coming from the angle of a personal theory I've developed over the past couple of years that social anxiety is nothing more than extreme introversion, magnified by the shame or feeling that one isn't "normal". Just a theory, perhaps I should hush it.