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#31 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: Chicago
Posts: 80
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Quote:
I understand the difference between feelings and emotions. (For me) emotions are the responses to feelings. I can feel contentment and still not let an emotion be the basis for any action I may or may not take. Emotions simply have no value other than the expression of a feeling. Let it come, pass, and then move on with what's important. |
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#32 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: ENFP
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 1,389
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Quote:
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#33 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: INFP
Posts: 6
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I am engaged to an ISTJ and my best friend is ISTP. Dangerous territory, since I'm an INFP; luckily, though, I have some out of type traits with my F (tough rather than tender, questioning rather than accepting), so I can manage a masquerade as a T.
Anyways, in my experience, folks with S and T either account for people's feelings too much or hardly at all. For example, my ISTP friend used to constantly concern himself with the feelings of others, even in situations in which he should have only looked after number one! In the end, I would enter the situation, kick some ass, help him out, and he'd learn by example. Still kind of wimpy about stuff, but I've toughened him up some. My ISTJ fiancee' seems to sacrifice herself for other people because of things like "Well, we used to be friends," and so on. Seems to me that her sense of duty is how she navigates, and sometimes it causes her to damn what it costs her personally. Very strange to me; I admire the whole duty-oriented style and I appreciate her values, but it's hard for me to imagine the past as being a powerful impetus for the future. Sometimes it is, but I generally don't look backward as much as she does. She also has this affinity for doing mundane things like buying cookware and making dinner that she's romanticized; the other day, she was sighing almost dreamily about carrying out errands and such with me! In general, I find that T types care too much or too little about the feelings of themselves and those around them. ISTJs in particular seem to either care too much because of a sense of traditionalist duty or care too little from a sense of organizational responsibility. |
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#34 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: South African in the USA
Posts: 1,562
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Quote:
Heaven forbid, spontaneity......
__________________
yesiknowimamiserablegrouchnowgoawayovmeleor It's Mizzz ST, thank you... |
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#35 (permalink) | |
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C-in-C Pimpship
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: Bayou country
Posts: 2,270
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This thread is full of great responses for non-ISTJs to pore over.
At first, this quote didn't catch my eye, but when I did read it through, I was in very strong agreement: Quote:
And the post near the beginning of this thread also made a good point, that in place of using Feeling itself to make a decision, we analyze the emotional landscape with Thinking to make it. At least, that sounds about right.
__________________
You can't spell "justice" without ISTJ. |
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#36 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Type: ENFP
Location: Tulsa, OK
Posts: 218
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Quote:
thanks!what I really really want to know is when there is a conflict of interest between the heart (for lack of a better word) and the brain... why does the brain ALWAYS win? With me, sure, when I feel there's a moral conflict, my brain will outway what my heart (feelings.. whatever) wants to do mainly because a person's brain knows right and wrong when the heart is blind to it... However.. when there is no clear right or wrong answer... why can't the heart ever overrule the brain with ISTJs? |
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#37 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: South African in the USA
Posts: 1,562
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Quote:
With regards to human interaction I will let thinking override feeling purely to avoid being vulnarable or possibly making a fool of myself. Potentially expressed emotions(that heaven forbid! could possibly bring softness to the situation) gets suppressed by very strong thinking/rationalization of why it would be stupid to express these emotions.
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yesiknowimamiserablegrouchnowgoawayovmeleor It's Mizzz ST, thank you... |
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#38 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: Chicago
Posts: 80
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Quote:
When making a decision regarding "heart vs. brain" the choice (from my personally warped perspective) is not "heart vs. brain", but "brain vs. brain." I think through the act of an emotional response versus a purely cognitive response. I think it comes down to a question of priorities: if the emotional response is the priority, then I employ it. So I guess the heart occasionally wins out, but only if it is associated with what I have defined as what is important.
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...doesn't work or play well with others... |
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#39 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: ISTJ
Location: South African in the USA
Posts: 1,562
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Quote:
__________________
yesiknowimamiserablegrouchnowgoawayovmeleor It's Mizzz ST, thank you... |
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#40 (permalink) | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Type: INTJ
Location: Northampton, MA
Posts: 29
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Quote:
Though actually I sometimes have a run-in with his feelings. When he's upset, he makes it very visible. He sits at the kitchen table with his head in his hands trying to send everyone on a guilt trip. Other times I start arguments about his faults and I think it really hurts his feelings, but what do I care, I'm an INTJ. He had the worst temper too, for a long time. It's not so bad now. I will always remember how he would turn purple in less than 10 seconds with his eyes bulging out of his head.. scariest thing I will ever see. He never spent time with me or my brother when we were children because he was too busy being "productive". He never has time to fix things anymore but he still insists that eventually he'll get around to it. Hire someone to fix it? Of course not! That's why the ceiling tiles in the basement still aren't all in.
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I - 67% N - 62% T - 22% J - 56% |
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