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The ENFP mistype thread: MBTI and Enneagram

17K views 72 replies 34 participants last post by  Llyralen  
#1 ·
Dear ENFP,

I'm aware that there are ENFPs out there that think that some self-proclaimed ENFPs have mistyped themselves. Now as a way to help to identify these mistypes and to correctly re-type them, I created this thread. This thread is not created to insult people but only to help them to do some more research or to correctly type them. No one wants to be a mistype really so don't feel bad if your name pops up here. Enneagram can be discussed here as well. Another good reason to identify the mistypes is of course to seek and establish a connection among ENFPs - "I have herpes, is this an ENFP thing/can anyone relate?" :dry: You know the drill.

There are some rules though:

- always correctly mention the person so no gossip behind someone's back.
- respectfully explain why he/she is not an ENFP/enneagram type X so no loose cannon remarks.
- if he/she doesn't want to discuss this out here in the open, stop or take it to the PM.

Kind regards,


All in Twilight (EFNP and not ENTP thank you very much)
 
#3 ·
While I think mistypes happen, I think it is rather asinine to believe you know a person's type based off of a few mere posts made on the interwebs. There are just too many things that factor into the behaviors displayed here to be able to even make an educated guess. I'll use myself as an example.

A lot of my posts are quite cut and dry. I know this. Some have even suggested Te dominance. What people fail to realize is that I have acquired quite the case of OCD as a result of PTSD. I was not always this way though. As time has gone by, it's gotten worse, but I am working on it. A lot of the behaviors I've displayed here have a whole heck of a lot to do with that. I feel the need to have a certain amount of control over my life, and many of my posts reflect that. Having a cut and dry mentality has helped me feel in very in control of myself and what I allow in my life. I fear losing control in and over my life as a result of some of the traumas I've suffered, and it's understandable.

I suppose what I'm trying to say is that you never know exactly who you're talking to, what they've been through, what they're going through, or why they're acting the way they are. It is not up to you, but to the persons in question to figure out their types if they so wish. Your type is not my business, and quite frankly, I don't care if you're mistyped. It's your journey. Your road to self-discovery is likely to be a bumpy and confusing road. Mine certainly has been. The ones who are dedicated to their self-discovery will figure out for themselves whether or not they are mistyped. As far as the others go, it doesn't really matter. There are worse things in life than being mistyped, and I'll leave it at that ;)
 
#4 ·
what a ballzy thread!

true ENFPs who think they are other types
- @All in Twilight: what made you think you are an Fe dom? you are not Fe-ish at all. ENFP 1w9 Sx/Sp
- @KindOfBlue06: not an INFP. much too zany and responsive. ENFP 7w? Sx/So
 
#6 ·
Lollz @Swordsman of Mana You're still campaigning for my ENFP type 7 status eh? I was thinking about making another type me thread in enneagram, although I've been kind of depressed lately and don't want it to skew the results. NFP Sx/so for sure though. Now state the case for ENFp over INFP and 7 over 3.
I've said it before I think you are ENFP blue. I don't know about enneagram core type, but I'd say you are ENFP for sure.
 
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#8 ·
People who type as ENFP need to have the following interaction style or they aren't ENFPs. This is based on Dario Nardi's research lol.

The following types also have this interaction style: ENFP, ESFJ, ESFP, ENTP

Get-Things-Going™ Interaction Style

The theme is persuading and involving others. They thrive in facilitator or catalyst roles and aim to inspire others to move to action, facilitating the process. Their focus is on interaction, often with an expressive style. They Get-Things-Going™ with upbeat energy, enthusiasm, or excitement, which can be contagious. Exploring options and possibilities, making preparations, discovering new ideas, and sharing insights are all ways they get people moving along. They want decisions to be participative and enthusiastic, with everyone involved and engaged.

This should weed out any introverts. In neuroscience they say Ne dom's brain lights up like a christmas tree because they can think of 10 solutions to the same problem at the same time no matter the IQ & display zany cross contextual thinking.
 
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#32 ·
This seems like malarky. Ne is not about social interaction and social introversion has nothing to do with the E/I of MBTI. It's no wonder people are mistyped on here when these vague astrologic type descriptions continue to hold any weight. In fact, it is fairly widely accepted that ENXP's should be the most socially introverted of all the "MBTI Extraverts". It also somewhat goes against Fi, as Fi wouldn't exactly be expressive but contained with in... expressive sounds more like a dom/aux Fe user.

"ENFP and ENTP: Under stress, become “The Obsessor,” obsessing about facts and details. Flip Side Motto: “This ONE thing is absolutely important!”"

Now *this* part is very true... Ne goes into overdrive and tries to filter . It's one reason I avoid caffeine, my brain is always overclocked anyway.
 
#9 ·
I sometimes wander if im a closet ENFP, haha! In fact I wander if some of those who suffer with depression and are typed INFP are in fact ENFP, with depression, your not really yourself and so that can bias things. Its hard to type yourself when you are mentally unhealthy so its probably best to go by your most natural, healthy state. Idk, just my $2c.
I don't think im extroverted though but I sure do have my zany moments :confused:
 
#19 ·
I sometimes wander if im a closet ENFP, haha! In fact I wander if some of those who suffer with depression and are typed INFP are in fact ENFP, with depression, your not really yourself and so that can bias things. Its hard to type yourself when you are mentally unhealthy so its probably best to go by your most natural, healthy state. Idk, just my $2c.
I don't think im extroverted though but I sure do have my zany moments :confused:
Yes, yes, YES! That happened to me for years. <3
 
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#11 ·
I don't know if this thread is supposed to be self assessment or not, but what the hell. Here goes nothing!
@Swordsman of Mana - We've discussed type before but not much about the specifics regarding why I do not believe I am ENFP. I've pulled additional resources from other threads I have created for this purpose. I would most definitely like to hear your thoughts. @All in Twilight- You seem like a no-nonsense kinda guy and I've enjoyed reading how you respond to posts. Please feel free to respond.

Of course, anybody can respond. Please, no petty arguments, I just want facts. If you start spouting off Ne or 2wWhatever please I would really appreciate your reasoning. Plus, without reasoning, I am led to believe you have bias and don't really know what you are talking about. No offense, of course!

So here goes.

ENFP 629 sx/sp

is what I've been labeled from you guys here. While I mostly agree with the Ennegram and pretty completely with the variants, I still have some doubts on the ENFP. I mean, the first time I was labeled that was through my psychologist with letter definitions (not function definitions). I can completely agree with Extraverted Intuition being in the first two (likely still a Ne-dom). But right now I feel much more the screwed up mess while trying to rediscover who I am at the core. My relationship with my dad while I lived with him squashed a lot of my abilities (ex 'you have to do things this way' 'you can't like that?' 'how dare can you think that's progress?' 'here, let me fix your mistakes')

The only other two that fit well, in terms of type description are INFP and ENTP. I have also waffled with ISFJ (until I met one :laughing:). When I was trying to type my husband later last year I had a few people who thought I used Ti>Fe over Fi>Te in descriptions of what is important to me.

I was told by @stone100674 this sounded more Ti>Fe and @petitpèlerin that this sounded ENTP > ENFP
Finaille said:
Oh, I enjoy it a lot. While I would never shoplift myself (don't prefer to deal with those consequences, thank you very much!), I always wonder all the different ways people can get away with it. Considering I've been in retail for over 6 years now, I'm always trying to figure out methods to improve the LP system. The other night there were two girls shoplifting in my fitting room. Problem is, we only have one LP at our store and he was gone! Considering that by the time I checked their fitting room and the time they left the fitting room was less than 30 seconds, something easily could have been done about it. Of course, the first thing that comes to mind is HIRE ANOTHER LP, dur! If 1 in 11 people steal, then you need somebody there all the time. Although I don't know how much LP is paid, I can't help but wonder if they would actually save more money by having more in our store.

It's also somewhat fun to determine if there actually are any fool-proof systems for theft, too. I have this whole theory about tag-teaming, actually. But as I said, it's not to actually figure out how to be a thief, it's more to figure out how to catch a thief.
I also said this about Fi. Please correct me if I am not getting the right idea of Fi; this was something I made up and based on what I have observed this quote is accurate to me.

Finaille said:
The more I read about introverted feeling I see it as a strategic protection mechanism I learned to basically protect myself through the worst times in my life. It helped me to determine who is basically good and bad; who to trust, who to stay away from. This is a mechanism that does not come naturally.
To continue with a further idea from this quote, I'd like to say it was my loving friends, family, and therapist who had to teach me a lot about boundaries; they do not come naturally for all for me. I would trust people with hindsight now that there were signs they would backstab me, but I would trust them anyways. Then I'd get hurt. But this might part might not be so much lack of Fi as it is extremely poor nonverbal communication.

And then I got sidetracked reading all of my own threads while conducting more analyzing. Whoops.
 
#22 ·
I don't know if this thread is supposed to be self assessment or not, but what the hell. Here goes nothing!
@Swordsman of Mana - We've discussed type before but not much about the specifics regarding why I do not believe I am ENFP. I've pulled additional resources from other threads I have created for this purpose. I would most definitely like to hear your thoughts. @All in Twilight- You seem like a no-nonsense kinda guy and I've enjoyed reading how you respond to posts. Please feel free to respond.

Of course, anybody can respond. Please, no petty arguments, I just want facts. If you start spouting off Ne or 2wWhatever please I would really appreciate your reasoning. Plus, without reasoning, I am led to believe you have bias and don't really know what you are talking about. No offense, of course!

So here goes.

ENFP 629 sx/sp

is what I've been labeled from you guys here. While I mostly agree with the Ennegram and pretty completely with the variants, I still have some doubts on the ENFP. I mean, the first time I was labeled that was through my psychologist with letter definitions (not function definitions). I can completely agree with Extraverted Intuition being in the first two (likely still a Ne-dom). But right now I feel much more the screwed up mess while trying to rediscover who I am at the core. My relationship with my dad while I lived with him squashed a lot of my abilities (ex 'you have to do things this way' 'you can't like that?' 'how dare can you think that's progress?' 'here, let me fix your mistakes')

The only other two that fit well, in terms of type description are INFP and ENTP. I have also waffled with ISFJ (until I met one :laughing:). When I was trying to type my husband later last year I had a few people who thought I used Ti>Fe over Fi>Te in descriptions of what is important to me.

I was told by @stone100674 this sounded more Ti>Fe and @petitpèlerin that this sounded ENTP > ENFP


I also said this about Fi. Please correct me if I am not getting the right idea of Fi; this was something I made up and based on what I have observed this quote is accurate to me.



To continue with a further idea from this quote, I'd like to say it was my loving friends, family, and therapist who had to teach me a lot about boundaries; they do not come naturally for all for me. I would trust people with hindsight now that there were signs they would backstab me, but I would trust them anyways. Then I'd get hurt. But this might part might not be so much lack of Fi as it is extremely poor nonverbal communication.

And then I got sidetracked reading all of my own threads while conducting more analyzing. Whoops.
I'm not going to type people based on just little shards of information. It's a principle I maintain because I don't want to be wrong and I don't want to be involved in a discussion that can only lead to problems. I will give you the descriptions of Ti and Fi by C. Jung and see for yourself which one fits you best.

Oh, which reminds me.... I see you live in Minnesota. Do you happen to know a half Japanese big boobed (slender body) concert pianist going by the name of Elizabeth? Normally I find these questions ridiculous but Minnesota is pretty small and she is kinda big xD I mean she is public and somewhat well known.

Peculiarities of the Basic Psychological Functions in the Introverted Attitude

Thinking

When describing extraverted thinking, I gave a brief characterization of introverted thinking, to which at this stage I must make further reference. Introverted thinking is primarily orientated by the subjective factor. At the least, this subjective factor is represented by a subjective feeling of direction, which, in the last resort, determines judgment. Occasionally, it is a more or less finished image, which to some extent, serves as a standard. This thinking may be conceived either with concrete or with abstract factors, but always at the decisive points it is orientated by subjective data. Hence, it does not lead from concrete experience back again into objective things, but always to the subjective content, External facts are not the aim and origin of this thinking, although the introvert would often like to make it so appear. It begins in the subject, and returns to the subject, although it may undertake the widest flights into the territory of the real and the actual. Hence, in the statement of new facts, its chief value is indirect, because new views rather than the perception of new facts are its main concern. It formulates questions and creates theories; it opens up prospects and yields insight, but in the presence of facts it exhibits a reserved demeanour. As illustrative examples they have their value, but they must not prevail. Facts are collected as evidence or examples for a theory, but never for their own sake. Should this latter ever occur, it is done only as a compliment to the extraverted style. For this kind of thinking facts are of secondary importance; what, apparently, is of absolutely paramount importance is the development and presentation of the subjective idea, that primordial symbolical image standing more or less darkly before the inner vision. Its aim, therefore, is never concerned with an intellectual reconstruction of concrete actuality, but with the shaping of that dim image into a resplendent idea. Its desire is to reach reality; its goal is to see how external facts fit into, and fulfil, the framework of the idea; its actual creative power is proved by the fact that this thinking can also create that idea which, though not present in the external facts, is yet the most suitable, abstract expression of them. Its task is accomplished when the idea it has fashioned seems to emerge so inevitably from the external facts that they actually prove its validity.
But just as little as it is given to extraverted thinking to wrest a really sound inductive idea from concrete facts or ever to create new ones, does it lie in the power of introverted thinking to translate its original image into an idea adequately adapted to the facts. For, as in the former case the purely empirical heaping together of facts paralyses thought and smothers their meaning, so in the latter case introverted thinking shows a dangerous tendency to coerce facts into the shape of its image, or by ignoring them altogether, to unfold its phantasy image in freedom. In such a case, it will be impossible for the presented idea to deny its origin from the dim archaic image. There will cling to it a certain mythological character that we are prone to interpret as 'originality', or in more pronounced cases' as mere whimsicality; since its archaic character is not transparent as such to specialists unfamiliar with mythological motives. The subjective force of conviction inherent in such an idea is usually very great; its power too is the more convincing, the less it is influenced by contact with outer facts. Although to the man who advocates the idea, it may well seem that his scanty store of facts were the actual ground and source of the truth and validity of his idea, yet such is not the case, for the idea derives its convincing power from its unconscious archetype, which, as such, has universal validity and everlasting truth. Its truth, however, is so universal and symbolic, that it must first enter into the recognized and recognizable knowledge of the time, before it can become a practical truth of any real value to life. What sort of a causality would it be, for instance, that never became perceptible in practical causes and practical results?
This thinking easily loses itself in the immense truth of the subjective factor. It creates theories for the sake of theories, apparently with a view to real or at least possible facts, yet always with a distinct tendency to go over from the world of ideas into mere imagery. Accordingly many intuitions of possibilities appear on the scene, none of which however achieve any reality, until finally images are produced which no longer express anything externally real, being 'merely' symbols of the simply unknowable. It is now merely a mystical thinking and quite as unfruitful as that empirical thinking whose sole operation is within the framework of objective facts.
Whereas the latter sinks to the level of a mere presentation of facts, the former evaporates into a representation of the unknowable, which is even beyond everything that could be expressed in an image. The presentation of facts has a certain incontestable truth, because the subjective factor is excluded and the facts speak for themselves. Similarly, the representing of the unknowable has also an immediate, subjective, and convincing power, because it is demonstrable from its own existence. The former says 'Est, ergo est' ('It is ; therefore it is') ; while the latter says 'Cogito, ergo cogito' (' I think ; therefore I think'). In the last analysis, introverted thinking arrives at the evidence of its own subjective being, while extraverted thinking is driven to the evidence of its complete identity with the objective fact. For, while the extravert really denies himself in his complete dispersion among objects, the introvert, by ridding himself of each and every content, has to content himself with his mere existence. In both cases the further development of life is crowded out of the domain of thought into the region of other psychic functions which had hitherto existed in relative unconsciousness. The extraordinary impoverishment of introverted thinking in relation to objective facts finds compensation in an abundance of unconscious facts. Whenever consciousness, wedded to the function of thought, confines itself within the smallest and emptiest circle possible—though seeming to contain the plenitude of divinity—unconscious phantasy becomes proportionately enriched by a multitude of archaically formed facts, a veritable pandemonium of magical and irrational factors, wearing the particular aspect that accords with the nature of that function which shall next relieve the thought-function as the representative of life. If this should be the intuitive function, the 'other side' will be viewed with the eyes of a Kubin or a Meyrink. If it is the feeling-function, there arise quite unheard of and fantastic feeling-relations, coupled with feeling-judgments of a quite contradictory and unintelligible character. If the sensation-function, then the senses discover some new and never-before-experienced possibility, both within and without the body. A closer investigation of such changes can easily demonstrate the reappearance of primitive psychology with all its characteristic features. Naturally, the thing experienced is not merely primitive but also symbolic; in fact, the older and more primeval it appears, the more does it represent the future truth: since everything ancient in our unconscious means the coming possibility.
Under ordinary circumstances, not even the transition to the 'other side' succeeds—still less the redeeming journey through the unconscious. The passage across is chiefly prevented by conscious resistance to any subjection of the ego to the unconscious reality and to the determining reality of the unconscious object. The condition is a dissociation—in other words, a neurosis having the character of an inner wastage with increasing brain-exhaustion—a psychoasthenia, in fact.

The Introverted Thinking Type

Just as Darwin might possibly represent the normal extraverted thinking type, so we might point to Kant as a counterexample of the normal introverted thinking type. The former speaks with facts; the latter appeals to the subjective factor. Darwin ranges over the wide fields of objective facts, while Kant restricts himself to a critique of knowledge in general. But suppose a Cuvier be contrasted with a Nietzsche: the antithesis becomes even sharper.
The introverted thinking type is characterized by a priority of the thinking I have just described. Like his extraverted parallel, he is decisively influenced by ideas; these, however, have their origin, not in the objective data but in the subjective foundation. Like the extravert, he too will follow his ideas, but in the reverse direction: inwardly not outwardly. Intensity is his aim, not extensity. In these fundamental characters he differs markedly, indeed quite unmistakably from his extraverted parallel. Like every introverted type, he is almost completely lacking in that which distinguishes his counter type, namely, the intensive relatedness to the object. In the case of a human object, the man has a distinct feeling that he matters only in a negative way, i.e., in milder instances he is merely conscious of being superfluous, but with a more extreme type he feels himself warded off as something definitely disturbing. This negative relation to the object—indifference, and even aversion—characterizes every introvert; it also makes a description of the introverted type in general extremely difficult. With him, everything tends to disappear and get concealed. His judgment appears cold, obstinate, arbitrary, and inconsiderate, simply because he is related less to the object than the subject. One can feel nothing in it that might possibly confer a higher value upon the object; it always seems to go beyond the object, leaving behind it a flavour of a certain subjective superiority. Courtesy, amiability, and friendliness may be present, but often with a particular quality suggesting a certain uneasiness, which betrays an ulterior aim, namely, the disarming of an opponent, who must at all costs be pacified and set at ease lest he prove a disturbing-element. In no sense, of course, is he an opponent, but, if at all sensitive, he will feel somewhat repelled, perhaps even depreciated. Invariably the object has to submit to a certain neglect; in worse cases it is even surrounded with quite unnecessary measures of precaution. Thus it happens that this type tends to disappear behind a cloud of misunderstanding, which only thickens the more he attempts to assume, by way of compensation and with the help of his inferior functions, a certain mask of urbanity, which often presents a most vivid contrast to his real nature. Although in the extension of his world of ideas he shrinks from no risk, however daring, and never even considers the possibility that such a world might also be dangerous, revolutionary, heretical, and wounding to feeling, he is none the less a prey to the liveliest anxiety, should it ever chance to become objectively real. That goes against the grain. When the time comes for him to transplant his ideas into the world, his is by no means the air of an anxious mother solicitous for her children's welfare; he merely exposes them, and is often extremely annoyed when they fail to thrive on their own account. The decided lack he usually displays in practical ability, and his aversion from any sort of re[accent]clame assist in this attitude. If to his eyes his product appears subjectively correct and true, it must also be so in practice, and others have simply got to bow to its truth. Hardly ever will he go out of his way to win anyone's appreciation of it, especially if it be anyone of influence. And, when he brings himself to do so, he is usually so extremely maladroit that he merely achieves the opposite of his purpose. In his own special province, there are usually awkward experiences with his colleagues, since he never knows how to win their favour; as a rule he only succeeds in showing them how entirely superfluous they are to him. In the pursuit of his ideas he is generally stubborn, headstrong, and quite unamenable to influence. His suggestibility to personal influences is in strange contrast to this. An object has only to be recognized as apparently innocuous for such a type to become extremely accessible to really inferior elements. They lay hold of him from the unconscious. He lets himself be brutalized and exploited in the most ignominious way, if only he can be left undisturbed in the pursuit of his ideas. He simply does not see when he is being plundered behind his back and wronged in practical ways: this is because his relation to the object is such a secondary matter that lie is left without a guide in the purely objective valuation of his product. In thinking out his problems to the utmost of his ability, he also complicates them, and constantly becomes entangled in every possible scruple. However clear to himself the inner structure of his thoughts may be, he is not in the least clear where and how they link up with the world of reality. Only with difficulty can he persuade himself to admit that what is clear to him may not be equally clear to everyone. His style is usually loaded and complicated by all sorts of accessories, qualifications, saving clauses, doubts, etc., which spring from his exacting scrupulousness. His work goes slowly and with difficulty. Either he is taciturn or he falls among people who cannot understand him; whereupon he proceeds to gather further proof of the unfathomable stupidity of man. If he should ever chance to be understood, he is credulously liable to overestimate. Ambitious women have only to understand how advantage may be taken of his uncritical attitude towards the object to make an easy prey of him; or he may develop into a misanthropic bachelor with a childlike heart. Then, too, his outward appearance is often gauche, as if he were painfully anxious to escape observation; or he may show a remarkable unconcern, an almost childlike naivete. In his own particular field of work he provokes violent contradiction, with which he has no notion how to deal, unless by chance he is seduced by his primitive affects into biting and fruitless polemics. By his wider circle he is counted inconsiderate and domineering. But the better one knows him, the more favourable one's judgment becomes, and his nearest friends are well aware how to value his intimacy. To people who judge him from afar he appears prickly, inaccessible, haughty; frequently he may even seem soured as a result of his antisocial prejudices. He has little influence as a personal teacher, since the mentality of his pupils is strange to him. Besides, teaching has, at bottom, little interest for him, except when it accidentally provides him with a theoretical problem. He is a poor teacher, because while teaching his thought is engaged with the actual material, and will not be satisfied with its mere presentation.
With the intensification of his type, his convictions become all the more rigid and unbending. Foreign influences are eliminated; he becomes more unsympathetic to his peripheral world, and therefore more dependent upon his intimates. His expression becomes more personal and inconsiderate and his ideas more profound, but they can no longer be adequately expressed in the material at hand. This lack is replaced by emotivity and susceptibility. The foreign influence, brusquely declined from without, reaches him from within, from the side of the unconscious, and he is obliged to collect evidence against it and against things in general which to outsiders seems quite superfluous. Through the subjectification of consciousness occasioned by his defective relationship to the object, what secretly concerns his own person now seems to him of chief importance. And he begins to confound his subjective truth with his own person. Not that he will attempt to press anyone personally with his convictions, but he will break out with venomous and personal retorts against every criticism, however just. Thus in every respect his isolation gradually increases. His originally fertilizing ideas become destructive, because poisoned by a kind of sediment of bitterness. His struggle against the influences emanating from the unconscious increases with his external isolation, until gradually this begins to cripple him. A still greater isolation must surely protect him from the unconscious influences, but as a rule this only takes him deeper into the conflict which is destroying him within.
The thinking of the introverted type is positive and synthetic in the development of those ideas which in ever increasing measure approach the eternal validity of the primordial images. But, when their connection with objective experience begins to fade, they become mythological and untrue for the present situation. Hence this thinking holds value only for its contemporaries, just so long as it also stands in visible and understandable connection with the known facts of the time. But, when thinking becomes mythological, its irrelevancy grows until finally it gets lost in itself. The relatively unconscious functions of feeling, intuition, and sensation, which counterbalance introverted thinking, are inferior in quality and have a primitive, extraverted character, to which all the troublesome objective influences this type is subject to must be ascribed. The various measures of self-defence, the curious protective obstacles with which such people are wont to surround themselves, are sufficiently familiar, and I may, therefore, spare myself a description of them. They all serve as a defence against 'magical' influences; a vague dread of the other sex also belongs to this category.
Feeling

Introverted feeling is determined principally by the subjective factor. This means that the feeling-judgment differs quite as essentially from extraverted feeling as does the introversion of thinking from extraversion. It is unquestionably difficult to give an intellectual presentation of the introverted feeling process, or even an approximate description of it, although the peculiar character of this kind of feeling simply stands out as soon as one becomes aware of it at all. Since it is primarily controlled by subjective preconditions, and is only secondarily concerned with the object, this feeling appears much less upon the surface and is, as a rule, misunderstood. It is a feeling which apparently depreciates the object; hence it usually becomes noticeable in its negative manifestations. The existence of a positive feeling can be inferred only indirectly, as it were. Its aim is not so much to accommodate to the objective fact as to stand above it, since its whole unconscious effort is to give reality to the underlying images. It is, as it were, continually seeking an image which has no existence in reality, but of which it has had a sort of previous vision. From objects that can never fit in with its aim it seems to glide unheedingly away. It strives after an inner intensity, to which at the most, objects contribute only an accessory stimulus. The depths of this feeling can only be divined—they can never be clearly comprehended. It makes men silent and difficult of access; with the sensitiveness of the mimosa, it shrinks from the brutality of the object, in order to expand into the depths of the subject. It puts forward negative feeling-judgments or assumes an air of profound indifference, as a measure of self-defence.
Primordial images are, of course, just as much idea as feeling. Thus, basic ideas such as God, freedom, immortality are just as much feeling-values as they are significant as ideas. Everything, therefore, that has been said of the introverted thinking refers equally to introverted feeling, only here everything is felt while there it was thought. But the fact that thoughts can generally be expressed more intelligibly than feelings demands a more than ordinary descriptive or artistic capacity before the real wealth of this feeling can be even approximately presented or communicated to the outer world. Whereas subjective thinking, on account of its unrelatedness, finds great difficulty in arousing an adequate understanding, the same, though in perhaps even higher degree, holds good for subjective feeling. In order to communicate with others it has to find an external form which is not only fitted to absorb the subjective feeling in a satisfying expression, but which must also convey it to one's fellowman in such a way that a parallel process takes place in him. Thanks to the relatively great internal (as well as external) similarity of the human being, this effect can actually be achieved, although a form acceptable to feeling is extremely difficult to find, so long as it is still mainly orientated by the fathomless store of primordial images. But, when it becomes falsified by an egocentric attitude, it at once grows unsympathetic, since then its major concern is still with the ego. Such a case never fails to create an impression of sentimental self-love, with its constant effort to arouse interest and even morbid self-admiration just as the subjectified consciousness of the introverted thinker, striving after an abstraction of abstractions, only attains a supreme intensity of a thought-process in itself quite empty, so the intensification of egocentric feeling only leads to a contentless passionateness, which merely feels itself. This is the mystical, ecstatic stage, which prepares the way over into the extraverted functions repressed by feeling, just as introverted thinking is pitted against a primitive feeling, to which objects attach themselves with magical force, so introverted feeling is counterbalanced by a primitive thinking, whose concretism and slavery to facts passes all bounds. Continually emancipating itself from the relation to the object, this feeling creates a freedom, both of action and of conscience, that is only answerable to the subject, and that may even renounce all traditional values. But so much the more does unconscious thinking fall a victim to the power of objective facts.
The Introverted Feeling Type

It is principally among women that I have found the priority of introverted feeling. The proverb 'Still waters run deep' is very true of such women. They are mostly silent, inaccessible, and hard to understand; often they hide behind a childish or banal mask, and not infrequently their temperament is melancholic. They neither shine nor reveal themselves. Since they submit the control of their lives to their subjectively orientated feeling, their true motives generally remain concealed. Their outward demeanour is harmonious and inconspicuous; they reveal a delightful repose, a sympathetic parallelism, which has no desire to affect others, either to impress, influence, or change them in any way. Should this outer side be somewhat emphasized, a suspicion of neglectfulness and coldness may easily obtrude itself, which not seldom increases to a real indifference for the comfort and well-being of others. One distinctly feels the movement of feeling away from the object. With the normal type, however, such an event only occurs when the object has in some way too strong an effect. The harmonious feeling atmosphere rules only so long as the object moves upon its own way with a moderate feeling intensity, and makes no attempt to cross the other's path. There is little effort to accompany the real emotions of the object, which tend to be damped and rebuffed, or to put it more aptly, are 'cooled off' by a negative feeling-judgment. Although one may find a constant readiness for a peaceful and harmonious companionship, the unfamiliar object is shown no touch of amiability, no gleam of responding warmth, but is met by a manner of apparent indifference or repelling coldness.
One may even be made to feel the superfluousness of one's own existence. In the presence of something that might carry one away or arouse enthusiasm, this type observes a benevolent neutrality, tempered with an occasional trace of superiority and criticism that soon takes the wind out of the sails of a sensitive object. But a stormy emotion will be brusquely rejected with murderous coldness, unless it happens to catch the subject from the side of the unconscious, i.e. unless, through the animation of some primordial image, feeling is, as it were, taken captive. In which event such a woman simply feels a momentary laming, invariably producing, in due course, a still more violent resistance, which reaches the object in his most vulnerable spot. The relation to the object is, as far as possible, kept in a secure and tranquil middle state of feeling, where passion and its intemperateness are resolutely proscribed. Expression of feeling, therefore, remains niggardly and, when once aware of it at all, the object has a permanent sense of his undervaluation. Such, however, is not always the case, since very often the deficit remains unconscious; whereupon the unconscious feeling-claims gradually produce symptoms which compel a more serious attention.
A superficial judgment might well be betrayed, by a rather cold and reserved demeanour, into denying all feeling to this type. Such a view, however, would be quite false; the truth is, her feelings are intensive rather than extensive. They develop into the depth. Whereas, for instance, an extensive feeling of sympathy can express itself in both word and deed at the right place, thus quickly ridding itself of its impression, an intensive sympathy, because shut off from every means of expression, gains a passionate depth that embraces the misery of a world and is simply benumbed. It may possibly make an extravagant irruption, leading to some staggering act of an almost heroic character, to which, however, neither the object nor the subject can find a right relation. To the outer world, or to the blind eyes of the extravert, this sympathy looks like coldness, for it does nothing visibly, and an extraverted consciousness is unable to believe in invisible forces.
Such misunderstanding is a characteristic occurrence in the life of this type, and is commonly registered as a most weighty argument against any deeper feeling relation with the object. But the underlying, real object of this feeling is only dimly divined by the normal type. It may possibly express its aim and content in a concealed religiosity anxiously shielded, from profane eyes, or in intimate poetic forms equally safeguarded from surprise; not without a secret ambition to bring about some superiority over the object by such means. Women often express much of it in their children, letting their passionateness flow secretly into them.
Although in the normal type, the tendency, above alluded to, to overpower or coerce the object once openly and visibly with the thing secretly felt, rarely plays a disturbing role, and never leads to a serious attempt in this direction, some trace of it, none the less, leaks through into the personal effect upon the object, in the form of a domineering influence often difficult to define. It is sensed as a sort of stifling or oppressive feeling which holds the immediate circle under a spell. It gives a woman of this type a certain mysterious power that may prove terribly fascinating to the extraverted man, for it touches his unconscious. This power is derived from the deeply felt, unconscious images; consciousness, however, readily refers it to the ego, whereupon the influence becomes debased into personal tyranny. But, wherever the unconscious subject is identified with the ego, the mysterious power of the intensive feeling is also transformed into banal and arrogant ambition, vanity, and petty tyranny. This produces a type of woman most regrettably distinguished by her unscrupulous ambition and mischievous cruelty. But this change in the picture leads also to neurosis.
So long as the ego feels itself housed, as it were, beneath the heights of the unconscious subject, and feeling reveals something higher and mightier than the ego, the type is normal. The unconscious thinking is certainly archaic, yet its reductions may prove extremely helpful in compensating the occasional inclinations to exalt the ego into the subject. But, whenever this does take place by dint of complete suppression of the unconscious reductive thinking-products, the unconscious thinking goes over into opposition and becomes projected into objects. Whereupon the now egocentric subject comes to feel the power and importance of the depreciated object. Consciousness begins to feel 'what others think'. Naturally, others are thinking, all sorts of baseness, scheming evil, and contriving all sorts of plots, secret intrigues, etc. To prevent this, the subject must also begin to carry out preventive intrigues, to suspect and sound others, to make subtle combinations. Assailed by rumours, he must make convulsive efforts to convert, if possible, a threatened inferiority into a superiority. Innumerable secret rivalries develop, and in these embittered struggles not only will no base or evil means be disdained, but even virtues will be misused and tampered with in order to play the trump card. Such a development must lead to exhaustion. The form of neurosis is neurasthenic rather than hysterical; in the case of women we often find severe collateral physical states, as for instance anæmia and its sequelæ.
 
#16 ·
Give me some love, people!

Also, @StaceofBass, I think your INFP typing was more accurate. Inferior Te makes more sense for you ^^
Thanks, thing is though that when I get stressed, I relate more with inferior Si. People have actually told me I come across as an xSFJ before when I'm really stressed. o.o
 
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#15 ·
@Finaille

I don't know many ENTPs personally, at least not closely. I do have some ENFP friends who tend to trust people too much and have had to learn boundaries: one of them was a childhood friend so that was just a part of growing up for her; the other is older and very wise but he chooses to err on the side of trusting people and giving them a chance. Really good man.

Your relationship with your dad sounds like a high-Si type squashing an Ne-type's creativity. (Any chance he's a slightly unhealthy xSTJ?)

My verdict is still out. I think you're right that you're probably an Ne-dom but which one, I'm not sure. If you say that you developed Fi as a self-preserving defense mechanism and that it doesn't come naturally then I believe you. FPs really don't have any trouble judging what's good and bad, what they like and don't like, etc. Unless maybe their natural Fi was squashed (such as by an overbearing STJ parent). If that were the case with you and you were really an ENFP, then you would rely heavily on Te rather Fi and appear like a Thinking Ne-dom. Have you tried to sort out whether you naturally prefer Te vs Ti?
 
#20 ·
Your relationship with your dad sounds like a high-Si type squashing an Ne-type's creativity. (Any chance he's a slightly unhealthy xSTJ?)
Yes, he is very one way or the highway. I'm so glad his girlfriend isn't afraid to tell him when he isn't looking at other viewpoints and being narrow minded. He has told me he has typed IxTJ. I'd say one of the hardest lessons I'm trying to sort through now that I've moved out is 'Who am I?'. I am stuck with few hobbies as most of the ones I enjoyed as a child were squashed, and the ones he permitted me to do I got sick of later on. I'm forging my own way though, slowly.

My verdict is still out. I think you're right that you're probably an Ne-dom but which one, I'm not sure. If you say that you developed Fi as a self-preserving defense mechanism and that it doesn't come naturally then I believe you. FPs really don't have any trouble judging what's good and bad, what they like and don't like, etc. Unless maybe their natural Fi was squashed (such as by an overbearing STJ parent). If that were the case with you and you were really an ENFP, then you would rely heavily on Te rather Fi and appear like a Thinking Ne-dom. Have you tried to sort out whether you naturally prefer Te vs Ti?
I read somewhere that Ti deconstructs, and Te constructs. I do have to break everything down and analyze information really carefully, which might explain why I take forever making logical decisions and may also explain my inability to get things done quickly. I want the information that I present to be right and I have the incessant need to filter in all information. I've also learned very early that no matter how 'right' your information is, people will still not agree with you so I have to filter in their input as well. On top of that, I realized that some people will try to demean your logic with cruel words and an overbearing attitude, so I don't like to waste my breath.

People have said my tendency to think out loud is Te, but I think it's a way for me to organize and remember my own words. Writing my thoughts down is much more simple.
 
#25 ·
@All in Twilight

tl;du (too long, didn't understand)

(I did try to read it though!)

I am pretty sure I don't understand a damn thing from the text you posted (I assume it was from a book, as it does not seem to match your typical tone). This is one of the issues I have with personality theory in general, to be frank. I mean, it's in English, but I read a whole paragraph and still had no clue what it meant. This flowery language distracts from the message. It sounds pretty, and that's about all I take from the message.

I assume I can't be the only one who reads that and think whoever wrote it is spouting a lot of hooey to sound smart while it really means very little. I know that is likely not the case, but the message does not correlate best with my learning style.

Whoever can read and understand it, can you rephrase so I can try to capture the message?
 
#27 ·
@All in Twilight

tl;du (too long, didn't understand)

(I did try to read it though!)

I am pretty sure I don't understand a damn thing from the text you posted (I assume it was from a book, as it does not seem to match your typical tone). This is one of the issues I have with personality theory in general, to be frank. I mean, it's in English, but I read a whole paragraph and still had no clue what it meant. This flowery language distracts from the message. It sounds pretty, and that's about all I take from the message.

I assume I can't be the only one who reads that and think whoever wrote it is spouting a lot of hooey to sound smart while it really means very little. I know that is likely not the case, but the message does not correlate best with my learning style.

Whoever can read and understand it, can you rephrase so I can try to capture the message?
Yes, it's a translation of Jung. It's not perfect but it's the best we have so far and it's free. I don't mind helping people out but did you really think I would give it THAT much thought and spend so much effort? The fact that you really expected this makes you somewhat narcissistic. ENTP for you xD (that's a joke. I thought I tell you because some people here really don't get me)

Psychological Types - Wikisocion

Try to root out inconsistencies. At first - when I knew basically nothing about MBTI/Jung - I was typed as an ENTP by my ex but she was just in love with me but I think even more so with the ENTP. But when I joined the ENTP forum here, I felt that they were somewhat different. They're very competitive for example and talk a lot about things I don't give shit about. One guy told me that I was an ENFP (total douche btw) and I did some more research Ne Ti Fe Si vs Ne Fi Te Si. I was able to determine my type because I love stats and really enjoy stuffing information into graphs and matrices and deduct things. I am sure I am capable of applying logical subjective reason (Ti) but Te over Fe it is for me (facts and stats: the objective) just felt right. I already knew I was a Ne dom so voilá! ENFP it is.
 
#31 ·
@PumpkinEater
you already know you are an ENFP, but I just want to make you sure dont switch back to INFP in case of a moment of weakness. True blue ENFP!
@NeonBomb
I think you give off an ENFP vibe. You seem like a very optimistic person, in spite of all the hardships life throws at you. You also seem very outgoing in the right environment. Unlike other INFPs, you don't seem to mind conflict as much, and you seem like a fighter, which is what defines ENFPs. We fight for what we believe in. Just a thought! :p
 
#35 ·
@NeonBomb
I think you give off an ENFP vibe. You seem like a very optimistic person, in spite of all the hardships life throws at you. You also seem very outgoing in the right environment. Unlike other INFPs, you don't seem to mind conflict as much, and you seem like a fighter, which is what defines ENFPs. We fight for what we believe in. Just a thought! :p

Awh Acey those words are precious to me! Thanks a bunch :)

Now that you mentioned it, ever since I started college I've really come to love other people and what they have to bring. While I still need my space to heal, I have come to love the relationships I have with others. Love meeting new peeps
 
#39 ·
hehe ... I was reluctant to look at the post quote after the initial one... but cool post... I understand how it is easy to just go off on immediately seeing a post... and good post by the way, it's all"good in the hood" :D I have to run though so probably more later in a day or so, busy day and weekend ahead.

Mostly I agree with your MBTI boxing in thus why I took down my personality type and my currently flavor of the day is ENXP.

I used to be a big coffee drinker also but realized it was a bit of a crutch then was able to discern differences in mood and thought patterns while on it... less deep thought on coffee, more getting done lots of tasks, though maybe not the task that needed to get done and less reflective on decisions while on it.

I do identify the stress reaction, but I was more referring to a looping evaluating behavior under a mild stressor to make a decision, in more major stress the Si comes up and it's more like WTF have I been doing with my life and get caught up in extremely irrelevant details I shouldn't be picky about and know I can go through them anyway. I.E. I would advise somebody else that these details are a joke, just to enjoy themselves and it is not set in stone, yet I am secretly super analyzing them and should take my own advice under stress. Sometimes I like blocking them out as I don't want to "go there" again...

lol @ the obsessor... yes... *deletes all complicated excel lists weighing pros and cons playing out plausible futures*... I play around with the future and possible changes more than anybody I personally know.

Usually I know I should relax about MBTI typing as I know it's a loose theory, yet... every blue moon I'll obsess over it.
 
#49 ·
I make suggestions and am in no way convinced one way or the other of whether my suggestions are correct or incorrect. You know yourself better than I do, and the internet only gives me a vague idea of who you really are. That said, I would suggest so/sx for your instinctual stacking, and would encourage you to perhaps read up on types 4, 7, and 9. I would guess that is your tri-type, but like I said, I'm not really the one to make that call. @timeless wrote some really great descriptions that are accurate and easy to understand. They're stickied in each enneatype's forum :)
 
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#47 ·
Have at it - MBTI and Enneagram. I'm still trying to figure out the whole Enneagram thing, though I'm pretty sure I'm core 6.
 
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#50 ·
By the way, I like how you guys are doing this. I think it's much better for people who want help to open themselves up to other people's opinions. But to just claim that people are mistyped with complete disregard for whether or not they want your help on their personal journey... meh. Kinda rude.

Oh, and you guys can offer up your ideas as to my type as well. I'm definitely open to it.
 
#51 ·
By the way, I like how you guys are doing this. I think it's much better for people who want help to open themselves up to other people's opinions. But to just claim that people are mistyped with complete disregard for whether or not they want your help on their personal journey... meh. Kinda rude.

Oh, and you guys can offer up your ideas as to my type as well. I'm definitely open to it.
I don't think it's rude. If someone tells me this I am x along with a proper explanation why I could be x, then I would just assume that he/she is trying to help me and I would certainly take his/her explanation into consideration. Only an idiot partakes in a journey that is not his and only an idiot would feel offended if A tells him that he/she is a mistype because of.... Why not accept help/advise on your personal journey? Besides, it's a typology forum so if you can't deal with this, then don't come here. You ought to know that you can expect to hear these kind of things.
 
#56 ·
I think ENFPs are nice and enjoy listening to other's perspective (i know i do (do not am :p)), and there's sincerity in seeking of knowledge, i won't be offended by any suggestion - all input is appreciated.Having said that, i'm willing to fight with anyone, mano a mano, i just don't see any compelling reasons atm!
 
#60 ·
I thought I was an INFP until I began to see I couldn't be without people for too long. Sure, I can spend hours in front of a computer or a TV, but I'm almost always texting someone, keeping up some form of communication. I claimed I was an introvert for years, but I recently realized I wasn't ever drained by people. I was scared of people. I decided to research ENFP vs. INFP, and now know for a fact I was and am an ENFP. I need my time away from people, yes, but I thought this meant I was an introvert, when it was actually just the time I needed away as the most introverted extrovert. I only knew of one suspected ENFP, and she was my cousin. I now believe she's just a highly intelligent ESFP. The reason I thought she was an ENFP was because of her interest in psychology, when that was actually her Fi that was so interested in how people worked. So, she was my example. I felt I wasn't outgoing or friendly enough to be an extrovert, but I know now it just means I prefer my outer world.
 
#63 ·
Hi all,

i haven't figured out my MBTI. i've read the descriptions but i can find several things from several different types to agree with and then there is no one type i don't deviate from in a significant way at the same time....so at the first few glances it seems to me like i don't fit any one single MBTI type at all.

one MBTI type, though, that i think has most overlap with me is ENFP, but there are things in ENFP descriptions i really don't agree with at the same time.

i'm not what one would call a 'people-person'. i really am not interested in most people, but i do get fascinated by some individuals. those i'm interested in i'm very interested in. but i don't actively pursue being in a social setting and don't prioritize relationships (unless they're romantic relationships). ENFPs are made out to be people persons, and whereas i can turn quite social in the right company i also exhibit straightforward anti-social tendencies and can be downright hostile with strangers. i certainly don't care about their feelings (ENFPs are said to care about this) and have no problems stepping over someone to get what i want. would you say this is still compatible with ENFP or at least possible?

if i am an ENFP i am a very toned down version of one (at least where most people are concerned). Robin Williams-like people, that's not me. i'm not so emotionally volatile, or rather, i do not show this volatility to other people (i consider it being a weakness). i admit i do know what it's like to feel that way inside, i think... i know what it's like to get carried away by the momentum of your own emotions and intensity of whatever it is you're experiencing, but i do not act like that in public. i experience my emotions by myself and only let a few close friends see that side of me. when i do, on occasion, let a percentage of that volatility out with strangers/acquaintances (it has happened), i feel like i've overdone it and let my guard down.

i've read some of the threads here and descriptions of the type and i can agree with a lot that's being said. the preferences, behavioral quirks, and experience of ENFPs resonate with me quite strongly actually. but i am not so flighty most of the time. at least not on the outside in the company of most people. most of the time i'm on my own doing my own thing, and i consider myself a very private person for that reason. i don't act up, and i don't come off as such. i think i'm actually pretty grounded, while at the same time on the inside things can be moving at the speed of light. i feel these two simultaneously – being highly dynamic and grounded at the same time.

what are your thoughts on this? i'd appreciate some feedback. i've decided to give MBTI one more try but maybe i'll never figure it out...enneagram was so much easier compared to this.
 
#64 ·
Ohkay. Setting fire to an old thread here.

I know MBTI typing isn't the end all be all of me but this result really piqued my curiosity. I was hoping someone could help me with this. I tested as an ENFP twice and an INFP once, then just now I retook the test and got this confusing answer:

Te - 45%

Ti - 85%

Ne - 95%

Ni - 95%

Se - 65%

Si - 85%

Fe - 90%

Fi - 95%

//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
based on your results your type is likely - unclear


Wha-? 95% on both Ni and Ne? Is it possible to be equally dominant in both Ni and Ne, or was the test I took just faulty? Also, I've been on Christmas break for about a week now and have no reason to be stressed.
 
#65 ·
Tests are cool but sometimes depending on who you are they do not work. I think it might be better to look at the functions first and see what fits. Though I am in no way good at this myself. Took me sort of forever to find my right type and I can still see someone suggesting another.
 
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