This is the kind of decision that, it depends on how well you know yourself....
For me, I'm a creative introvert, I have a natural aptitude for solitude, I can handle it better than others who don't have these two traits in unison. It only works for me because I really can keep myself distracted and train my mental state to know myself wholly of the good, the bad and the ugly and still learn to love and accept myself.
That's what makes me sort of an anomaly factor. Most people, can't do that.
I know other introverts but they aren't creative so it doesn't work for them.
And I've known a lot of extroverts with high functioning social anxiety disorder who really are amazed at my ability to manage isolation well.
And then, even if a person does have these two traits, both introversion and creativity, they would then have to learn how to use them as tools to their favor, and worldview as such will be a factorial variable as well as a natural challenge just as it was for me.
I'm speaking entirely from my own experiences, this is why I am the way that I am.
I can't really recommend this to other people, because other people are not me, and just because I made something work for me does not mean it will work for someone else.
But the reason and the way that I got here, started with OPs original question, actually.
I didn't want to end up chasing an endless dream while having it destroy my life along the way, after all I'm getting older, not younger.
But I also didn't want to settle and end up stuck in an unhappy lifelong relationship, either.
So I used the tools that I had, and taught myself how to be more comfortable than not with being alone.
Which apparently stuns people.