My husband — a brooding New Yorker, polite and tolerant of much — broke on the seventh day of our family vacation.
“She doesn’t stop talking,” he said.
The “she“ is my mother — a bubbly Midwesterner — who can hold court in a room of strangers with the deftness of a small-town politician at a church picnic. Awkward silences don’t stand a chance — even in a jam-packed elevator.
But some people like silence. They thrive on it, said John Hackston, head of thought leadership at The Myers-Briggs Company.
That’s one of many areas that can pose problems for travel companions on opposite ends of the introversion-extroversion spectrum, he said. Be it spouses, best friends or acquaintances, travelers enduring long stretches of time together often struggle to find a middle ground.
More than a decade of introversion advocacy — jumpstarted by the publication of Susan Cain’s “Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking” — has helped many introverts accept and publicly champion what makes them tick.
But the same level of reflection hasn’t happened with extroverts, said Hackston.
“There’s been less of an emphasis on extroverts understanding of selves,” said Hackston, because “Western society, in particular, tends to see extroversion as the right way to do things.”
As a result, many remain in the dark as to how they can affect those around them.
Missed cues
Cultural layers
Developing self-awareness
“So it’s not just extroverts compared to introverts. Sometimes it’s extroverts together,” he said.
Family travel blogger Emma Morrell said she’s managed to avoid many of the personality pitfalls that spoil others’ trips by being careful about who she travels with.
“You do have to know yourself, and the people that you’re traveling with,” she said.
“I have some very good friends who I love dearly, but we would never go away with,” she said. “Just because you’re good friends, it doesn’t mean that you’ll be good travelers.”