24 Cartoons That Will Deeply Resonate With Introverts (Especially INFJs)
Aaron Caycedo-Kimura, the illustrator behind INFJoe Cartoons, says he created the series to help other INFJs not feel so alone.
Jenn Granneman is the founder of IntrovertDear.com and the author of The Secret Lives of Introverts: Inside Our Hidden World. Jenn is a contributor to Psychology Today, HuffPost, Susan Cain’s Quiet Revolution, Upworthy, The Mighty, The Muse, Motherly, and a number of other outlets. She has appeared on the BBC and in Buzzfeed and Glamour magazine. Jenn started Introvert, Dear because she wanted to write about what it was like being an introvert living in an extrovert's world. Now she's on a mission: to let introverts everywhere know it's okay to be who they are.
Aaron Caycedo-Kimura, the illustrator behind INFJoe Cartoons, says he created the series to help other INFJs not feel so alone.
What are introverts like as kids? No two introverts are exactly alike, but introverted children tend to share these seven characteristics.
INFJs may be introverts, but few things are more important to them than close relationships. Nevertheless, they can really struggle to find love.
Here’s the science behind why socializing is “energizing” for extroverts but exhausting for introverts.
Are you in a relationship with one of the world’s deep feelers, thinkers, and processors? Your highly sensitive person needs to know — and feel — your love.
Maureen “Marzi” Wilson recently released Kind of Coping, a relatable, inspirational (and often humorous) look at her life as an introvert with anxiety.
Introvert Debbie Tung is obsessed. With books, that is. That obsession became the inspiration for her new illustrated book, appropriately titled, Book Love.
A lot of factors go into love, but here’s one very important way to express it to your introverted partner, based on their Myers-Briggs personality type.
Introverts, here’s one word to describe you as a partner in a romantic relationship, based on your Myers-Briggs personality type.
World Introvert Day has been celebrated every Jan. 2 by introverts across the globe since 2011 as a way to recharge their energy after the holiday season.