I have no
DESIRE to become a social butterfly. I do not derive pleasure from social interactions, outside of very limited 1:1 engagements, with strict boundaries.
The phenomenon of "the social gathering" is just a chaotic clusterfuck from my point of reference. Painful to experience vestigially, and even more painful to be forced to participate in. It gets even worse when there is alcohol, or other inebriating substance involved.
It is not a question of "If you try it, you will like it! You should try it more until you do!"
I have tried. I find that no, I do not enjoy social gatherings or situations. They simply remind me of how ... what's a nice and unoffensive way to put this?... How.... "gratingly needy" people are.
It isn't that people go out of their way to be that way; they just are. (By this, I mean to draw a very important distinction that people do not intend to, desire to, or go out of their way to, make themselves central figures, or to focus a discussion with their own perspectives, etc al, as the central focus. It is just a natural component of what I at least, personally consider (and yes, I am painfully aware of the irony there) to be a less developed or discerning way of experiencing the world. The default mechanism human minds have, is the "Self-experiential" model. Things that happened to themselves, personally, weigh much more highly in the decision making apparatus than does a more robust but theoretical model that involves external factors or models of other people's cognition. This has direct ties to, and associations with, the
"Theory of Mind". This often manifests to the point where more complex models of understanding the world, are simply never even explored to begin with, and exposure to the conception of doing so is onerous, difficult, and sometimes even outright rejected purposefully. Experiencing the world in the "system defaults" manner, with glib and facile attention to details, or structure of a shared physical reality (and focusing much more on undefinable subjective experiences or conceptions) is "more enjoyable", "more desirable", "easier", and "Gives more self-edification", and thus other models of exploring the world, no matter how much more demonstrably accurate or meaningful in the truer sense those other models are. Using the other models thus, detract from the real purpose of the social engagement-- reinforcement of the self (and its subjective experience) within the construct of group consensus (which is demonstrably not the same thing as objective agreement with a real, external world.) People typically do not go out of their way to interact with the world in this way, or with each other in this way-- it is just the default, and thus easiest for them to participate in.)
The issue, is that I do not find conjecture of that nature to be in any way useful, desirable, or edifying. As such, the casual conversational topics that get brought up in social engagements are... Painful... to experience.
I acknowledge that there is a benefit to engaging with other people, to better comprehend the objective world in which we find our subjective-experience-centered consciousnesses embedded; When engaged in properly (eg, with intent to shake loose actual demonstrable truths about reality itself, and not to discuss phantasms of subjectivity as if they were objectively real) it helps to better understand that objective world, that is naturally alien to how our minds intrinsically operate.
As such, solipsism is not a good avenue-- it leads to incestuous and inbred ideology, devoid of more complex understanding and nuance.
The problem, is that the level of engagement and consideration required to discuss such things, is often well outside the comfort zone and experience of most people, and steering a discussion in those directions is uncomfortable for the social gathering. (and thus "Ruins the party")
This puts me in a lose-lose-lose situation, when it comes to social gatherings.
Lose:
I find the superficial-at-best discourse unengaging, and painful.
Lose:
I find being asked to engage the discourse unpleasant-- I am mindful that attempts to actually engage the conversation will ruin the conversation for others. I am mindful that my lack of engagement with the discourse makes me seem aloof, or otherwise makes people think I am being left out-- and that they would like me to engage. (which is a thing I do not want to subject people I like to feeling.) I dislike causing such emotional pain in others.
Lose:
Explaining why I dislike social interaction and engagement leads to conflict and bad feelings in others, who really just want to (well meaningly, but ultimately selfishly) include me. I have to defend a position that looks elitist, sophist, and wantonly harsh to others. Again, I dont fault people for being how they are, it is just not what I need from a social interaction, and thus not something I enjoy. (You have to have a vested interest in understanding and interacting with the shared physical reality we find ourselves embedded in; Again, the way our minds work, does not live in that world. We are cut-off simulations of that world, that engage at the edges. That is simply what we are. The argument is about the level of detail we invest resources into simulating internally. The majority of people do not engage the world this way; You have to have a desire to, and then train yourself to, engage in that mode of behavior.)
To me, going to a party consists principally of:
Watching people say and do stupid shit, on open display. (pronouncedly so when alcohol is involved.)
Watching people discuss absurdities (that seem superficially true, but actually arent) as if they were actually true, real or substantive.
Being made to engage in that level of behavior and discourse, to avoid causing offense or upset.
I find none of those things pleasurable or enjoyable.
I prefer to politely abstain, in the vast majority of circumstances.