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#21 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ENFP
Location: NC female
Posts: 291
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#22 (permalink) |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2008
Type: INTP
Location: The Everlasting Sky
Posts: 9,359
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The ISTJs I've known seem to have an unhealthy relationship with their emotions. They don't understand their feelings, and their feelings can get the better of them. I don't have a solution to this problem to offer.
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#23 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ENFP
Location: NC female
Posts: 291
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I don't think it's unhealthy, but maybe just not expressed in a way that satisfies other people. I think they're okay with their emotions, but conflict comes when they try to please other people with their expression of them. IMO anyway...
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#28 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: Newport Beach, CA
Posts: 9
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I am an ISTJ and I always consider other people's feelings, maybe too much sometimes. I think I do that out of a sense of knowing it is the "right thing to do" and I "should" do it. I also do it because it avoids later conflict and I hate conflict (weird for a T, I know). When I was little, I didn't account for others and I was ALWAYS making my F parents mad! So, I learned.
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#29 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: Chicago
Posts: 80
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I can't consider the feelings of someone else when I make a decision. I don't consider myself a cold-hearted so-and-so (although others do); it's simply a matter of expediency. Since I have no sense of how another human being internalizes anything (each will react according to his or her own sense of values and experiences) attempting to factor that into a decision seems kind of counter-productive.
With regard to my own feelings, I express them; but I also understand why I feel happy, sad, etc. As an example, one of the things that amuses me about people is when they drive. People who speed up to pass me and then slam on the brakes to stop at the light that I know is going to turn red always gets a wry smile from me. The smile is not based on what theydid (or didn't do); it's the feeling of wondering if they learned something from the experience and realizing they probably didn't. They are then classified as potential hazards and the feeling passes. |
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#30 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ENFP
Posts: 573
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i think this is the key point of the whole thread. i think a lot of people here, especially F's think that they know how to read people very well. ISTJ's may find the notion of identifying feelings of others, of themselves, alien. therefore, the logical thing for them to do is to not put it into the picture. the way to let an ISTJ talk about emotions could therefore be explaining to them how emotions are a logical variable at least, therefore they can address them with more confidnece.
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