Might be about the same. But you can’t leave the jail cell. If you move to NYC and spend all your time in your 1 bedroom apartment you’re NYCing wrong.
That got me thinking. If spending all your time in a tiny 1BR apartment is NYC’ing wrong, would living in a hotel make sense? If you stayed at a mid-level chain like Holiday Inn Express or Hampton Inn, it’ll cost you $3000+ a month, but that already comes with daily breakfast, utilities and internet, free parking, and regular housekeeping. Some rooms might even have a small kitchen and could be bigger in total area than a 1BR apartment. The only issue is you can’t modify the interior except maybe add some furniture. But if you’re supposed to be out most of the time anyway, maybe that wouldn’t matter as much?
Introverts are not by definition antisocial though they can be. They just spend energy to be social. A shut-in is likely an introvert. An introvert doesn’t have to be a shut-in. I don’t know the mass public mistake where folks assume introverts are the same as people who don’t like social interaction. So an introvert can easily enjoy socializing in NYC and seeing people. It just uses energy.
That being said, if you’re not going to leave your apartment, choosing a place that’s super expensive due to all the things you need to leave your apartment for, you’re not making a good choice.
The guy implied that enjoying time alone at home is wrong. Introverts enjoy time alone at home. I didn’t say introverts only enjoy time alone at home, and I’m not doing this thing where I need a dozen disclaimers proving I really do know what the words I used mean every time I want to make a one-line quip.
Also why are y’all assuming she moved to NYC on purpose? Can no one just be from there originally and move from a roommate arrangement to a studio? Please lol
If you want to spend time in your house alone, and you’re living in NYC, yes you are very much making a stupid choice.
You could move outside of NYC, pay half as much in rent or less, and be a shut-in all you want while still commuting in for whatever reason you had to ever go to NYC as a shut-in in the first place.
I really didn’t take that as their implication. Apartments in New York are often not that comfortable–they can be cramped and cluttered, and not even all that private thanks to thin walls and sometimes even shared bathrooms. So even an introvert with that kind of apartment tends not to spend much time in it apart from sleeping. Instead they’ll go to libraries or museums or parks or makerspaces or cafes. It’s surprisingly easy to be alone in public in New York.
I think that’s all they meant. I see how you could take their comment differently, but I think they were being sincere. Actually spending a lot of time in their tiny dismal one-room apartment with no natural light is actually a mistake that some introverts make when they first move to New York, and it’s genuinely depressing to do that.
A caveat to all this is that I’ve only spent very brief periods in New York, and I do find it overwhelming, partly for this reason. But yeah. I don’t think that person meant to condemn spending time alone; they were just saying that treating a New York apartment like a solitary confinement cell isn’t good for your mental health regardless of your socialization tendencies.
Might be about the same. But you can’t leave the jail cell. If you move to NYC and spend all your time in your 1 bedroom apartment you’re NYCing wrong.
That got me thinking. If spending all your time in a tiny 1BR apartment is NYC’ing wrong, would living in a hotel make sense? If you stayed at a mid-level chain like Holiday Inn Express or Hampton Inn, it’ll cost you $3000+ a month, but that already comes with daily breakfast, utilities and internet, free parking, and regular housekeeping. Some rooms might even have a small kitchen and could be bigger in total area than a 1BR apartment. The only issue is you can’t modify the interior except maybe add some furniture. But if you’re supposed to be out most of the time anyway, maybe that wouldn’t matter as much?
Ah yes, your city must be under “this” size for introverts to be allowed. I always forget about that law.
Introverts are not by definition antisocial though they can be. They just spend energy to be social. A shut-in is likely an introvert. An introvert doesn’t have to be a shut-in. I don’t know the mass public mistake where folks assume introverts are the same as people who don’t like social interaction. So an introvert can easily enjoy socializing in NYC and seeing people. It just uses energy.
That being said, if you’re not going to leave your apartment, choosing a place that’s super expensive due to all the things you need to leave your apartment for, you’re not making a good choice.
The guy implied that enjoying time alone at home is wrong. Introverts enjoy time alone at home. I didn’t say introverts only enjoy time alone at home, and I’m not doing this thing where I need a dozen disclaimers proving I really do know what the words I used mean every time I want to make a one-line quip.
Also why are y’all assuming she moved to NYC on purpose? Can no one just be from there originally and move from a roommate arrangement to a studio? Please lol
If you want to spend time in your house alone, and you’re living in NYC, yes you are very much making a stupid choice.
You could move outside of NYC, pay half as much in rent or less, and be a shut-in all you want while still commuting in for whatever reason you had to ever go to NYC as a shut-in in the first place.
Extroverts also enjoy time alone at home and introverts can enjoy NYC which is the point where your claim breaks down.
And then I did address the meaning behind what they said without you literally making a nonsense conclusion.
I really didn’t take that as their implication. Apartments in New York are often not that comfortable–they can be cramped and cluttered, and not even all that private thanks to thin walls and sometimes even shared bathrooms. So even an introvert with that kind of apartment tends not to spend much time in it apart from sleeping. Instead they’ll go to libraries or museums or parks or makerspaces or cafes. It’s surprisingly easy to be alone in public in New York.
I think that’s all they meant. I see how you could take their comment differently, but I think they were being sincere. Actually spending a lot of time in their tiny dismal one-room apartment with no natural light is actually a mistake that some introverts make when they first move to New York, and it’s genuinely depressing to do that.
A caveat to all this is that I’ve only spent very brief periods in New York, and I do find it overwhelming, partly for this reason. But yeah. I don’t think that person meant to condemn spending time alone; they were just saying that treating a New York apartment like a solitary confinement cell isn’t good for your mental health regardless of your socialization tendencies.
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