onemoretime
Dreaming the life
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2009
- Messages
- 4,455
- MBTI Type
- 3h50
*watches the expansion with interest*
That's what she said.
*watches the expansion with interest*
Yup, and it's interesting that you bring this point up
I'm pretty sure that Jung urged people to integrate their shadows into their personality.
I don't think this is about mbti.
I think it was a remarkable post, and I'm disappointed as well.
Of course, maybe it was ignored because no one could take any beef with it?
I will say I don't relate at all to starting from a position of a trust and then booting them out if they violate it.
Thanks for that whole post. I want to focus on this:
I think that most Fi users will agree with starting from a position of trust, and most Fe users will feel as you do.
That is a key difference.
All, please weigh in and share on that point. Interested to expand it.
generally start from a position of guardedness that gradually opens if they see consistent behaviour that meets with approval to a certain standard.
@bold: THAT. yes. I think I've noted two or three times now in thread that I agree with it, pretty much as it stands. Not sure why my agreeing with it is overlooked either.
So if we say that Fi starts intra and Fe starts inter, then switching would be trying to start intra instead of starting inter, not exactly reaching Fi building that trust. As opposed to keep trying to reach intra. Would be like jumping ship for Xe instead of trying to reach Xi the normal way.
It may well be the key difference.
As an INTJ, I ended up essentially having to "turn off" emotions, because of the tendency of Fi to too readily trust. I "use Te" to substitute for Fe, but it still sucks at the job, because it really doesn't know when to hand it over to Fi.
Fe seems to be very capable of starting from a general distrust and to slowly and gradually warm to a person over time, possibly halting at "a particular level of trust" beyond which one is not allowed to cross.
Fi, for me, is that binary, on/off. I trust you with my heart, or I simply don't hold much affection for you at all and interface (albeit kindly and respectfully) via Te. And from seeing other Fi people in my life, it is "mostly binary." Lately, however, I've been slowly changing this on purpose, letting people see more of what is inside me, but not letting them all the way in. Perhaps this is kind of a "backwards Fe?" Where I still keep a close guard on my feelings, but send out "Fi probes" to see if a person is OK?
Anyway, it would likely behoove both Fe and Fi to recognize that these initial Fe/Fi states of distrust vs trust exist.
As for developing the opposite function, I think such recognition makes it easier how to train "the other function" even though one's preference would remain preferred.
You just described me.![]()
yeah, I have really wacky trust issues because I lived in orphanages for 5 years not because of my Fe.How, or why, we trust is not the result of a single jungian function. I'm waiting to see if someone claims Fe users go to Burger King, and Fi users go to Wendy's.
Do you have anything of value to add, or are you just here to take more pot-shots from the sidelines and contribute to an overall tone of distrust and indiscretion in this thread?
You know my position very well; I certainly don't attribute behaviour to MBTI. I don't need your "winky" emoticons as some sort of indirect reminder. But I do have an interest in examining the functions to see if they correlate at all to communication trends I have noted here over time. Fundamental blocks between people, and I am interested to see how to bridge those gaps.
Yet I grow tired of your insubstantial posts. You push the same weary rhetoric in every thread you participate in. Most of the time I ignore it, and when you post something of value I try to rep you and encourage your positive participation.
Not that it makes much difference, it seems.
But I see what you do. Just because I have the good manners not to point out your poor ones doesn't mean people don't see the "real" you in there.
![]()
I'm waiting to see if someone claims Fe users go to Burger King, and Fi users go to Wendy's.
Excelent question.
[hitler]
yeah, I have really wacky trust issues because I lived in orphanages for 5 years not because of my Fe.![]()
I don't think that's what people are trying to get at. Absolutely, specific issues in specific individuals are a result of a huge host of things going on in that one's life, and Jungian functions or typology play a partial role, at most.
However, discussing things in functional terms is not to imply that the functions cause the problem, but rather that those who rely strongly on that function perceive the problem(s) in a certain way or ways. I don't trust or distrust due to Fi, but rather my perception of trust appears to be "all or nothing" in emotional terms. I do "degrees of trust" in what I feel are "Te terms." I.e., once I get to "degrees of trust," it doesn't feel "emo" to me any more, but far more cold and rational and distant. It also feels very difficult for me to translate the "Te degrees of trust" into something more "emo," especially if I'm interested in getting closer to someone. It only translates, for me, into "emo" when I fully trust.
The entire hypothesis may be bogus: whatever I perceive as mapping to Fi or Te may not really consistently or correlatively map. But for now, we have people comparing notes. The idea isn't fleshed out. It certainly isn't "true" one way or the other: it's an investigation with several individuals participating, providing their own perspectives.
For instance, I suspect that in "Fe terms," it may very well feel more "emo" or less "emo," depending on the degree of trust. (I.e., Fe feels more or less "warm" towards one, given the degree of trust.) If you don't think it does, that's a wonderful data point to include. If you think it does, same thing. Either way, there's probably more detail you could provide from your perspective. It's by sharing perspectives that we all learn.
Thank you for responding, Pro!Here's a Fe dom telling you what they feel (none of these people are Fe doms BTW) and you begin your post, "I don't think that's what people are trying to get at."
To be clear, I don't believe I have dismissed anyone's responses. If you believe I have dismissed any of yours, I'm fully willing to go into more detail w/r to any specific case. I endeavor to be brief, so as not to bore the reader, and it is possible that I may have ignored a point you believe important in the interests of time and space [and superstring theory(!)].As a Fe dom (a person supposedly more inclined to use this function) she says no this is not the case, I don't default to distrust, she's telling you WHY the issue is occurring and it's dismissed. Once again, why are there so few FJs (and TPs) commenting in this thread when they're supposedly the people who use Fe consciously? Wouldn't they know what they're doing? Wouldn't their opinion hold a little more weight in this matter since they're doing it?
I feel like I have commented several times over as a Fe dom why people are possibly seeing what they're seeing and I'm yelling over a bunch of people who are like "whatever, let me tell you how you're supposed to function."
So, a Fe dom says "No I don't have trust issues because I'm Fe, I have them because something happened to me to make me skittish about XYZ" and you just dismiss her response.
Well, I think it was originally presented here:Do I default into distrust rather than trust? No, I feel mostly neutral towards the vast majority of people I met and I certainly don't start from a position of distrust. Unless I have reason to suspect or distrust you I feel neutral towards you.
OK, so I ask once again am I interpreting this correctly: Now people are hypothesizing that Fe starts from a position of distrust. This gets better!
For myself, I think this is true - starting from a position of guardedness and, over time, getting to know the person and seeing whether they are consistent in who they are.
So, a Fe dom says "No I don't have trust issues because I'm Fe, I have them because something happened to me to make me skittish about XYZ" and you just dismiss her response.
yeah, I have really wacky trust issues because I lived in orphanages for 5 years not because of my Fe.![]()
yes. That was a true experience but I played it off more as a joke.I thought themeant it was a joke. Is your experience true Pitseleh?
yeah, I have really wacky trust issues because I lived in orphanages for 5 years not because of my Fe.![]()
Hmm. Interesting question, Jaguar. However, I would argue that the opposite is true. Burger King's tagline is "Have it your way," which appeals to the Fi mindset.
I think you'll find that my position on the matter is logically thorough and completely defensible.
A position of "guardedness."
Does "guardedness" translate to "neutral" or "distrust," to you? I could see either being valid. I'm interested in how you feel/think about it.
Personally, I would hypothesize that Fe handles "degrees" of trust, in (please forgive, for lack of a better word) "emo" terms. I.e, one who is dom (or aux?) Fe feels positive or negative trust as more or less "warmth" or "coolness" towards a person. Personally, I "feel" trust as binary. I either "analyze" to figure how much risk I am willing to take, in a cold, calculating way, or I "just trust someone," effectively without reservation.