{"id":369,"date":"2006-01-11T10:59:26","date_gmt":"2006-01-11T15:59:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/52.52.55.152\/?p=369"},"modified":"2006-01-11T11:05:48","modified_gmt":"2006-01-11T16:05:48","slug":"big-i-versus-little-e","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.jennamagee.com\/?p=369","title":{"rendered":"Big &#8220;I&#8221; Versus Little &#8220;E&#8221;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>If you have never been subjected to one of those corporate, touchy-feely, &#8220;let&#8217;s all get to know ourselves better&#8221;, personality tests, than the title may not make any sense.  Have no fear, gentle reader, all shall become clear in time.<\/p>\n<p>Now, you may not know if from my blogging or emails, but I am an introvert.  That&#8217;s right, I rank pretty high on the &#8220;I&#8221; scale.  What that basically means is that being around other people, especially large groups of people, even more so for a group of people I don&#8217;t know, exhausts me.  Being an introvert means that you recharge by being alone.  I&#8217;m a home body.  I like to hang around my house in sweats on the weekends and pretend that I&#8217;m a hermit.  I don&#8217;t go outside a whole lot.  I don&#8217;t talk to my neighbors, except for the very outgoing guys across the street, and that&#8217;s only one a month or less.  I keep to myself.  I stitch, I read, I play video games, I like peace and quiet.<\/p>\n<p>But I wasn&#8217;t always that way.  Believe it or not, when I was a child, I was what we would term a &#8220;flaming E.&#8221;  I was so extroverted, I was a show-off, I was outgoing, I had to be the center of attention at all times.  I would talk to anyone, befriend everyone, I was probably every parent&#8217;s worst nightmare when it came to being friendly.  I could get up on a stage and sing or dance without a care.  I loved it, I ate it up, I craved attention in every way.  Then, when I was 11 years old, we moved to another city and I slipped a notch on the E scale.  I had to go to a new school, make new friends and I lived out in the boonies.  I had to ride a school bus for the first time in my life and was introduced to the new concept of not everyone likes me.  But, I bounced back after a bit.  I auditioned for the local television station and became a reporter for the kids new show that aired on Saturdays.  The cameraman called me the one take wonder because I didn&#8217;t require multiple takes when I did a report, so the shoots were always pretty quick.  I could pretty much take the sheet of paper that was given to me when I showed up for the shoot, memorize the contents, then get in front of the camera and do my piece.<\/p>\n<p>Anyway, that was obviously a boost to my ego and my extroversion.  And then came the day that I came home from a shoot, high as a kite because I always had so much fun, to find my parents in the living room crying.  I was 13 and that was the announcement of their divorce.  Now, I was a pretty healthy, happy kid, so you would think that I have been fine, right?  Let me tell you, I wasn&#8217;t.  That big E ran away squealing, buried deep inside of me and hid like a squeamish, quivering mass of slightly underdeveloped Jello.  I started writing &#8211; a lot.  I would wake up in the middle of the night and write page upon page of poetry.  I kept a journal for a creative writing class that I was taking and was able to spew a lot of my emotional wreckage onto the paper.  My teacher was an incredible kind and wonderful person and he helped me through this initial painful time.  Over the years, I became a drum major in junior high school and carried that into high school, which helped encourage my inner E to come out and play a little bit.  I competed in music festivals on flute, piccolo and voice.  Of course, my introversion manifested itself by making me throwing up before auditions because I was always a ball of nerves.  My mom remarried during that time, which introduced another stressful period of transition as I now had a stepfather and two little stepsisters to contend with when we moved into their house.  And my brother had already moved away to go to college&#8230; in Iowa (just before the divorce).  And then I went to college in Delaware.  Four hours from home and I knew no one.  And I was having problems with my dad, which eventually led to me estranging myself from him completely.<\/p>\n<p>Throw into the mix one bad 3-year mistake of a relationship (women really are attracted to men like their fathers, which was not a good thing at this time, given the above information) and by the time I finished college, I was a mess.  What was once such a big E was this tiny, shriveled entity that lived somewhere deep, deep inside where I couldn&#8217;t find it.   Don&#8217;t get me wrong, I knew I was smart and I knew I was good at what I did and a great catch as a new employee fresh out of college with practical experience already under my belt.  But that was about it.  My self-confidence was in the toilet.  I knew I was hot stuff, but I didn&#8217;t accept it.  I didn&#8217;t believe in myself.  Heck, I was a female who worked with computers.  And a smart, talented one at that.  I was a complete anomaly.<\/p>\n<p>Fast forward 8 years.  Thanks to a loving husband who nurtered me all of that time and a very gregarious and extroverted father-in-law, my inner E has grown back up a bit and even likes to come out and play every once in a while.  And so, dear reader, we come to the present time.  I discovered two years ago that I&#8217;m a natural born presenter.  I decided that I wanted to develop my speaking and presentation skills, so I took a class at work.  And was pretty much informed afterwards that they weren&#8217;t sure why I was in the class, that I had no need for it.  Not too long afterwards, I became part of a small team (basically 3 people) that presents a one-hour overview of IT at our company to new employees at orientation.  Cue my little E.  I&#8217;m so nervous, I&#8217;m shaking when I start (though my colleagues claim that they didn&#8217;t even notice).  But then something happens.  My E jumps out and just takes over.  I&#8217;m animated, I&#8217;m looking all around the room, talking to people like a natural and I barely remember anything.  Seriously.  Afterwards, it feels like someone else jumped into my body, ran me through an obstacle course and then left.  It&#8217;s great fun, until about two hours later, when I start to crash.  And I mean, hard-core, eat my dinner, lay down on the couch and drool a lake about 4 inches wide on my pillow, dead to the world for almost two hours, crash.<\/p>\n<p>That would be the big I taking back the controls.  So, you see, I have this little war that goes on inside me the day I have to present.  All morning, I look over the presentation and my big I says to me repeatedly, &#8220;Why are you doing this?  Are you a complete idiot?  You&#8217;re nervous, you don&#8217;t know the material and you&#8217;re going to screw up.  Why don&#8217;t you just say you&#8217;re sick and go home or something?&#8221;  And my little E says, &#8220;Come on, it&#8217;ll be fun!  We&#8217;ll have a great time and you&#8217;ll do just fine, just let me take control.  Come on&#8230; feed me!&#8221;  I sweat buckets beforehand, then I go into the room, little E jumps out and does the hokey pokey for an hour, I revel in my success for a bit and then I go home.  And the whole ride home, my big I screams, &#8220;NO, you FOOL!  Why did you let him DO THAT?!?  Now I have to clean up.  What is this all over my nice clean brain?  Are those, are those ENDORPHINS?  Oh, sheesh.  Let me just sweep those away.  Darn you!  Now I have to reboot!  *snore*&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>So&#8230; um&#8230; yeah.  That was my day yesterday.  How was yours?  \ud83d\ude06<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>If you have never been subjected to one of those corporate, touchy-feely, &#8220;let&#8217;s all get to know ourselves better&#8221;, personality tests, than the title may not make any sense. 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