Many people in their sixties realise on a quiet Sunday that they have been calling themselves a private person for thirty years when the more honest word is unpracticed at being asked anything real
The label 'private person' often hides something less flattering and more workable — a thirty-year habit of deflection that calcified into an identity. What aging research, defense mechanism theory and recent studies on isolation actually say about the gap between privacy and being unpracticed at real conversation.