{"id":105782,"date":"2020-09-02T21:31:16","date_gmt":"2020-09-03T01:31:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/effectsofanxiety.net\/?p=105782"},"modified":"2020-09-02T21:31:16","modified_gmt":"2020-09-03T01:31:16","slug":"networking-is-a-life-skill-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/effectsofanxiety.net\/archives\/105782","title":{"rendered":"Networking Is A Life Skill"},"content":{"rendered":"

I hear it over and over again: “I can’t network. I’m an introvert.” “I don’t know what to say.” “I don’t want to brag.” A lot of people don’t like networking, but the bulk of them seem to be introverts.<\/p>

I’m an introvert, too, and I’m also an entrepreneur, having to teach myself along the way how to reach out and build that body of interested people who support and buy what I do. To make it even harder, I retired in California, moved back to Minneapolis, waited a few years, and then found I wanted to start a business in a city where I had no business contacts and only one friend (a nun).<\/p>

Business coaches stymied me from the start, because they would start by saying: “First, send a warm letter to all of your friends, telling them what you’re doing and asking for their support.”<\/p>

Oh. A fellow coach wailed that she only had 100 friends on her Christmas card list, and I was awed by her popularity. This was an exercise at which I never excelled, because my Christmas card list was five.<\/p>

Introverts, whom I often call the “Quietly Brilliant,” are very likely to have one or two very deep friendships and a moderate number of pleasant acquaintances. This is dangerous for many reasons, among them the fact that those one or two deep relationships, whether professional or personal, can disappear in a wink of an eye, for such reasons as:<\/p>