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📢 文末扫码进裙,免费领取双语精读版 What Introverts and Extroverts Can Learn From Each Other Going against your instincts can help make you happier. The Atlantic By Arthur C. Brooks May 20, 2021 | 1180 words | ★★★★☆ A year before the pandemic changed all of our lives, a friend sent me a link to a survey based on academic research that rates your personality traits on a numeric scale. He was particularly keen to know my extroversion score, to see if the test was accurate. His results had shown that he scored at the 15th percentile. He sent it to me as the most extroverted person he knows. Sure enough, I scored at the 96th percentile. “Lucky you,” he remarked, “extroverts are a lot happier.” He was right about that, on average. Decades of research have consistently shown that extroverts have a significant happiness edge over introverts. They report higher levels of general well-being as well as more frequent moments of joy. COVID-19, however, has gi
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