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[ENFP] enfp's fact or fiction

arcticangel02

To the top of the world
Joined
Oct 5, 2007
Messages
892
MBTI Type
eNFP
Okay, I think this is a good a time as any to revive this thread! ^^

So, I want to know about ENFP obsessions!

Some starting questions: How long do they last? A day or two? A week? A few months? How 'intense' are they? What sort of subjects have held your interest? Any idea what causes them? What 'snaps you out of it', or causes you to move on to something else?

I think I'll wait to post my own experiences, but you guys go for it!
 

alcea rosea

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Nov 11, 2007
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3,658
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ENFP
Enneagram
7w6
Okay, I think this is a good a time as any to revive this thread! ^^

So, I want to know about ENFP obsessions!

Some starting questions: How long do they last? A day or two? A week? A few months? How 'intense' are they? What sort of subjects have held your interest? Any idea what causes them? What 'snaps you out of it', or causes you to move on to something else?

I think I'll wait to post my own experiences, but you guys go for it!

Obsessions, I don't have any obsessions... :rolleyes2:

....except typing people :yay:
 

Vortex

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Aug 29, 2007
Messages
277
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WOLF
I have lots of small obsessions that come and go. They'll last anywhere from a few days to a few years. I don't really have any idea why - sometimes I won't have enough time, some specific course of action will become more difficult to complete, something new pops up or my mind just takes a stroll elsewhere. Long-lasting obsessions that still have me in their grip are Terry Pratchett, Frasier, coffee, a particular brand of sweetener and MAC makeup. Hmmm, I'm not sure about the intensity - I'm not the 'fangirl' type. For something to be an obsession, it'll just end up as an integral part of my personality (like being long-haired, messy, and a smoker) until that part of me changes.
 

findthejake

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Sep 30, 2007
Messages
258
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ENFP
I am obsessed with being a traveler but I think the obsession has turned into a lifestyle because now it's just part of who I am instead of something I occasionally do.
 

Sandy

New member
Joined
Oct 10, 2007
Messages
552
MBTI Type
INFP
Anywhere I may roam... Where I lay my head is home

I am obsessed with being a traveler but I think the obsession has turned into a lifestyle because now it's just part of who I am instead of something I occasionally do.

*singing* Rover, wanderer, nomad, vagabond... Call me what you will... yeah, yeah...

*looking up* *realizing people are staring* Oh, don't mind me. :headphne:

hehe!
 

missellis75

New member
Joined
Jan 3, 2008
Messages
21
MBTI Type
ENFJ
"Ok, one thing I always read about ENFP's is the "grass is always greener on the other side", how does it feel to you to constantly be considered the cheating type? also I realise that you are not like that, but was there a point in your life before you fell in love with your husband that you did find yourself stuck in the "grass is always greener on the other side" mindset? and how did it feel to you?

EDIT: none of this is meant to cause offence, I just wished to hear it from an enfp perspective"
Sahara

LOL, when I first read this I must admit that I was rather offended, then I did a little introspection... yes, I am plagued by the thought that I would be happier or more fufilled in different circumstances. That is most troubling in my love life. However, I have found that in the few cases of actual real Love in a relationship, those feelings akin to the phrase "the grass is always greener on the other side," are easy to shrug off and ignore. In relationships where I am not as satesfied or where I am not in love, they pester and are almost a constaint thing, every action of my boyfriend is magnified and I spiral down, or just jump off while I have the chance: there in lies the cheating factor. ;)

So to answer your question, yes, I have cheated on some of my boyfriends, and thats nothing to be proud of, and it was a long time ago, now I try to either think more rationaly about problems I have with my partner, or if the problem is too big, or if it is a small thing that is a symptom of a larger problem, then I end it before anyone gets hurt.

Hope I answered to your satesfaction. and dont think less of me, or ENFPs because of my past actions, they reflect on who I was, not on who I am.

-Selene
 

CzeCze

RETIRED
Joined
Sep 11, 2007
Messages
8,975
MBTI Type
GONE
I get mini obsessions all the time.

I also used to have this weird sensation of being satisfied just by ordering something or buying something before using it. Sometimes as soon as I ordered food and it came to my table, I was no longer hungry. Or I want to take up an instrument and really feel a need to practice and have the instrument in my hands and then I'll get my hands one. After a little bit, I'm like alright I'm good.

I think that's also an Ennegram 7ish aspect, the fear of being deprived. I felt stifled and frenetic, like I was not going to be 'allowed' to do something but buying X would satisfy that fear and let me know that I did have agency or opportunity, etc.

Alright, I'll chalk this up to immaturity. And yes, I have ordered from infomercials before...But not recently! I have grown up, thank you.

I get obsessions still, and when I do, I seriously do get obsessed and if it takes up too much of my time or attention or is too distracting, I'll plough through it and do it as much as possible in an attempt to override my system. Basically, I try to make myself sick of it or get my fill in as short a time as possible so I can get over it and get back to normal.

I honestly don't feel a wandering eye when I'm with someone or think I will be soon. My strong attachments apply to people as well. :) And as impulsive and emotional as I am, I wouldn't want to be with someone unless I was slightly obsessed with them as well. But not in a stalker-ish way. Hahahaha.
 

LadyJaye

Scream down the boulevard
Joined
Nov 6, 2007
Messages
2,062
MBTI Type
ENFP
Enneagram
7w6
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
I get obsessed with order, as a general rule. I don't like chaos in my life, so if things are dysfunctional, in my external environment or in a facet of my life dynamic, then I can get hung up on thinking about how to solve a problem. Meaning that I'll think about it until I find a reasonable solution, so if the problem is unfixable at that juncture, I run the risk of obsessing over it anyway. I had to learn how to untrain my mind from that particular behaviour, because it was running me ragged, and it's still an automatic response I have to curb. I don't know necessarily if this is a type issue so much as a me issue, though.
 

missellis75

New member
Joined
Jan 3, 2008
Messages
21
MBTI Type
ENFJ
LadyJaye said:

I get obsessed with order, as a general rule. I don't like chaos in my life, so if things are dysfunctional, in my external environment or in a facet of my life dynamic, then I can get hung up on thinking about how to solve a problem. Meaning that I'll think about it until I find a reasonable solution, so if the problem is unfixable at that juncture, I run the risk of obsessing over it anyway. I had to learn how to untrain my mind from that particular behaviour, because it was running me ragged, and it's still an automatic response I have to curb. I don't know necessarily if this is a type issue so much as a me issue, though.

I have a friend who I origionally typed as ESFP, because she always kept such a tidy house. She got so mad at me--I was staying at her home for 4 months this fall--when I left a dish in the sink, or when something was out of place. Not only her house was so tidy, though, also her life became. Pretty fast I realised that she had lists and schedules for everyting. Her kids, her husband, even me. I started to think that it was a kind of obsession with order that she had, and I really didn't understand it at all until she explained to me that she only lived such a structured life as an attempt to cope with the chaos around her--she even confided in me that she hated all the structure and missed the organic spontinaity of her youth. When she told me that I started to think that maybe I had typed her wrong and infact she was an ENFP like me, just coping with her extreemly stressful life and using her inferior Si function in excess as a counterbalance.

I have never been a very neat person, and she told me (and I think it is very true) that It is because I simply don't see the messes the same way that she does, thanks to my inferior introverted sensing.

---

Concerning my obssesions, they are almost infinate, and concern almost every concivable type of activity. My most long-lasting obsessions involve something that requires abstract thought and creativity. Obsessions that I loose interest in quickly involve tedious, repetative tasks, with little or no immediate satesfactory product. I am very hesident to take part in any activity without understanding the full meaning or end product of the indevidual acts that it involves; simmilarly, I am very stubborn about backing an idea or proposition unless all the results and effects, and also the reasons for it, are brought to light.
 

allie bug

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Dec 30, 2007
Messages
37
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ENFP
question...

First of all, This thread is EXACTLY what I have been looking for! It's so wonderful to be able to see that other enfp's have the same problems: the "acting when you dont know you're acting"-the keeping people at a distance-so many other things that have been discussed..

-lately I've been wondering if I was becoming a J through necessity....I'm at the turning point in my life where I have to grow up, pay bills, be responsible ect...and i found that i really like the organization. But It's good to know that other ENFP's experience this also.

So, here's a question: have any of you had this experience (or been on the receiving end of it)? In my relationship, if something feels off, I either automatically assume that it's something I have done wrong, or that I have to fix it immediately. Are you all ever so worried about something turning into a large problem later on that you are hypersensitive to any minute conflict that comes up?
 

LadyJaye

Scream down the boulevard
Joined
Nov 6, 2007
Messages
2,062
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ENFP
Enneagram
7w6
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
I have a friend who I originally typed as ESFP, because she always kept such a tidy house. She got so mad at me--I was staying at her home for 4 months this fall--when I left a dish in the sink, or when something was out of place. Not only her house was so tidy, though, also her life became. Pretty fast I realized that she had lists and schedules for everything. Her kids, her husband, even me. I started to think that it was a kind of obsession with order that she had, and I really didn't understand it at all until she explained to me that she only lived such a structured life as an attempt to cope with the chaos around her--she even confided in me that she hated all the structure and missed the organic spontaneity of her youth. When she told me that I started to think that maybe I had typed her wrong and infact she was an ENFP like me, just coping with her extremely stressful life and using her inferior Si function in excess as a counterbalance.

I have never been a very neat person, and she told me (and I think it is very true) that It is because I simply don't see the messes the same way that she does, thanks to my inferior introverted sensing.


That's exactly what it is - thank you for putting it so succinctly. I have had to develop a tactical need for order, falling back on my Si, which does ultimately push me into a grip experience if I'm forced to maintain it for a long period of time. My mother recently went through a crisis, and almost lost her home - my sister and I were scrambling every day for months just to narrowly escape her house going into foreclosure. I consider financial things to be necessary but stressful, and then this recent nightmare was like pushing me straight off a ledge. I turn into the neatness police when I stress out, and I have no doubt that it's extremely annoying - I do actively attempt to curb the behaviour when I'm aware of it.


First of all, This thread is EXACTLY what I have been looking for! It's so wonderful to be able to see that other enfp's have the same problems: the "acting when you dont know you're acting"-the keeping people at a distance-so many other things that have been discussed..

-lately I've been wondering if I was becoming a J through necessity....I'm at the turning point in my life where I have to grow up, pay bills, be responsible ect...and i found that i really like the organization. But It's good to know that other ENFP's experience this also.

So, here's a question: have any of you had this experience (or been on the receiving end of it)? In my relationship, if something feels off, I either automatically assume that it's something I have done wrong, or that I have to fix it immediately. Are you all ever so worried about something turning into a large problem later on that you are hypersensitive to any minute conflict that comes up?

Now, are you referring to a romantic relationship, or to relationships in general? Because for some reason, I separate the two out - the romantic relationships cause me much more stress and hyper-awareness than my friendships. But, I can safely say that my tendency, when things go wrong, is to immediately place blame on myself, even though it's not like a martyr complex, or a self- flaggelating sort of thing. My mind just immediately jumps to , " Okay, so what did I do incorrectly here?" Sort of a self-assessment thing. But I think perhaps ENFP's all do that - we are always seeking out the path to what we perceive to be our authentic selves, so when something in a relationship goes wrong, we automatically question our roles in that dynamic.
 

allie bug

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Dec 30, 2007
Messages
37
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ENFP
Now, are you referring to a romantic relationship, or to relationships in general? Because for some reason, I separate the two out - the romantic relationships cause me much more stress and hyper-awareness than my friendships. But, I can safely say that my tendency, when things go wrong, is to immediately place blame on myself, even though it's not like a martyr complex, or a self- flaggelating sort of thing. My mind just immediately jumps to , " Okay, so what did I do incorrectly here?" Sort of a self-assessment thing. But I think perhaps ENFP's all do that - we are always seeking out the path to what we perceive to be our authentic selves, so when something in a relationship goes wrong, we automatically question our roles in that dynamic.


i was referring to a romantic relationship....though I do often take the blame in a friendship just to end conflict and move on to being on good terms.
As my boyfriend says
"You deal with a problem light years before the problem would actually come to a head"
So, Yes, I automatically ask "what did i do incorrectly?" but doesn't that have the extreme danger of putting everyone around you on a pedestal and not trusting yourself? I know we put others ahead of us a lot of the time, but how can you be your truly authentic self when you feel as if you are in the wrong ALL the time? :huh:
 

LadyJaye

Scream down the boulevard
Joined
Nov 6, 2007
Messages
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ENFP
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7w6
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
i was referring to a romantic relationship....though I do often take the blame in a friendship just to end conflict and move on to being on good terms.
As my boyfriend says
"You deal with a problem light years before the problem would actually come to a head"


I laughed when I read this, because I do the same thing. But, again, that's an ENFP trait. According to the MBTI books, ENFPs are very aware of the possibility of problems occurring in their environment - I think they term it as "hypervigilance", but to a lesser extent, I think it could be considered to be a "canary in the coal mine" sort of a function. My ENFJ sister is always amazed at what problems I foresee and head-off, as she is usually blissfully unaware of them. :D

I don't know about you, but I suffer from muscle tension frequently, because of the readiness state I find myself in mentally. I use meditation and exercise to offset it.


So, Yes, I automatically ask "what did i do incorrectly?" but doesn't that have the extreme danger of putting everyone around you on a pedestal and not trusting yourself? I know we put others ahead of us a lot of the time, but how can you be your truly authentic self when you feel as if you are in the wrong ALL the time? :huh:

That's a real kicker isn't it? I suffered with this for YEARS. We're extroverted Intuitives, and yet, we seem to automatically discount our ability to intuit information correctly. What the heck, man?! I finally had to just tell myself, " You're a reasonable, intelligent person - listen to what your instincts are telling you, because they're your strength. " More times than not, I was borne out in the end.
 

allie bug

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37
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ENFP
I'm with you on the muscle tension. I was so surprised to find that the was an ENFP trait....a physical trait for a personality profile!
But thank you for your input, trusting yourself seems to be the hardest barrier to overcome as and ENFP....but hey, at least you've worked on it and succeeded so that gives me a little inspiration
 

LadyJaye

Scream down the boulevard
Joined
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7w6
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so/sx
I'm with you on the muscle tension. I was so surprised to find that the was an ENFP trait....a physical trait for a personality profile!
But thank you for your input, trusting yourself seems to be the hardest barrier to overcome as and ENFP....but hey, at least you've worked on it and succeeded so that gives me a little inspiration


I was surprised too! I just assumed that most people had their shoulders winched up to their earlobes most of the time, like I did, but apparently we're much more susceptible to it.

When I talk to my twin sister about the struggles I have asserting my "me-ness" ( she's an ENFJ, so she doesn't have that problem. Actually, I use her as a reference point for helping me to push my own personality forward, the way she does. It helps tremendously. ), I always feel like I sound like such a headcase. lol Why it should be an issue is beyond me. Most people have to tone down how much they talk about themselves, but we seem to have an equal but opposite problem. It isn't healthy for us to recede, or to doubt our ability to intuit people or situations. When we allow that to be undercut, we essentially remove our mental sensors, as if someone removed our hands and feet and eyes. We suddenly have no way to judge our environment. It amazes me that all it takes to do this is to say, " Don't trust yourself. You're probably mistaken."
 

missellis75

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Jan 3, 2008
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ENFJ
When I talk to my twin sister about the struggles I have asserting my "me-ness" ( she's an ENFJ, so she doesn't have that problem. Actually, I use her as a reference point for helping me to push my own personality forward, the way she does. It helps tremendously. ), I always feel like I sound like such a headcase. lol Why it should be an issue is beyond me. Most people have to tone down how much they talk about themselves, but we seem to have an equal but opposite problem. It isn't healthy for us to recede, or to doubt our ability to intuit people or situations. When we allow that to be undercut, we essentially remove our mental sensors, as if someone removed our hands and feet and eyes. We suddenly have no way to judge our environment. It amazes me that all it takes to do this is to say, " Don't trust yourself. You're probably mistaken." -LadyJaye

BAHH! I know! Sometimes (on really bad days) I feel like I can't keep myself solid, like my personality is melting off of me, if that makes any sense--it's one of the strangest sensations that I think only ENFPs can understand, you feel traped inside your head, like you're looking out of your eyes at a bad movie, but its your life!

Or then there's almost the opposite stress-coping thing that I do: I "try on" different personalities (sometimes from tv shows or movies, I am embarased to say) and see which ones fit the best... ugh! The worst part is that I am conscious that I am doing it but I just don't even try to stop myself!

The good thing is that I have some amazing friends who I can't help but be myself around... A joke from them and my classic ENFP "silly-switch" is flipped and I'm back in the game.

---

That's exactly what it is - thank you for putting it so succinctly. ... I turn into the neatness police when I stress out, and I have no doubt that it's extremely annoying - I do actively attempt to curb the behaviour when I'm aware of it. -LJ

Wow! I'm glad that my vague ramblings were helpful! :)
 

LadyJaye

Scream down the boulevard
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BAHH! I know! Sometimes (on really bad days) I feel like I can't keep myself solid, like my personality is melting off of me, if that makes any sense--it's one of the strangest sensations that I think only ENFPs can understand, you feel traped inside your head, like you're looking out of your eyes at a bad movie, but its your life!


That is EXACTLY how it feels. Exactly. When I'm under stress, it feels like sand sliding from my fingers. As if my personality is atomizing, and there's nothing I can do to stop it. It used to make me feel really panicked when I started to feel that occuring, but now I know to just go somewhere and get quiet. So instead of chasing my personality around, I wait for it to return to me.

There's a poem by John Borroughs that I really connect to - perhaps you might see yourself in it as well.

Waiting - John Borroughs

Serene, I fold my hands and wait,
Nor care for wind nor tide nor sea;
I rave no more 'gainst time or fate,
For lo! my own shall come to me.

I stay my haste, I make delays -
for what avails this eager pace?
I stand amid the eternal ways
and what in mine shall know my face.

Asleep, awake, by night or day,
The friends I seek are seeking me,
No wind can drive my bark astray
Nor change the tide of destiny.

What matter if I stand alone?
I wait with joy the coming years;
My heart shall reap where it has sown,
And gather up its fruit of tears.

The waters know their own, and draw
The brook that springs in yonder height;
So flows the good with equal law
Unto the soul of pure delight.

The stars come nightly to the sky;
The tidal wave unto the sea;
Nor time, nor space, nor deep, nor high,
Can keep my own away from me.

I have to believe that what I am, and who I am, will come to me the way it needs to. I've tried to struggle with it in the past, and to force a change, or an evolution, and it's always traumatic. I hope that doesn't sound too disjointed or surreal.




Wow! I'm glad that my vague ramblings were helpful! :)

Don't we all think we do the "vague ramble"?! :D Yes, your rambles were very enlightening! Thanks for sharing them with me. :)
 

gretch

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Nov 27, 2007
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111
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ENFP
I have a running theory that All ENFP's have a tendency towards being Bipolar. :huh: :laugh:
 

Dom

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Apr 28, 2007
Messages
458
MBTI Type
ENFP
I have a running theory that All ENFP's have a tendency towards being Bipolar. :huh: :laugh:

It's the conflict between our values I guess.. one min one is in ascendancy the next another...
 
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