Scott N Denver
New member
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2009
- Messages
- 2,898
- MBTI Type
- INFP
- Enneagram
- 4w5
Scott N Denver, brilliant computer scientist, enneagram 4 infp:
enfps, great people, operate on a different wavelength, another animal altogether, and as such, there's no real need to base your growth/potential on patterns that will not jive with your latest series of phases.
2) Don't assume intps disregard others simply because they don't act as you'd expect them or blatantly forget semicolons. whether e1, 4, 5, 6 or 9, give em a chance. a few of my so/sp e56 frirnds let the years slip away, no doubt, but can expressing surprising depth of concern. Often there's a grabbag of phone salespeople at target if you need a sampling and if you're lucky you'll run into a socionics ni-subtype whose speech doesn't zip you up around the neck.
Do what you like, Scott N Denver. Take notes. Spend time with the crows and me. Take an active part in your community. Live where you're happy. Feel the wind beneath your outstretched wings.
your post confuses me. I am not a computer scientist. I never have been. I never want to be. I have programmed computers before, and quite frankly I did not find it enjoyable or something that I wished to keep doing. I do like math though.
Perhaps I was not adequately clear before, I am not some sort of "tortured" INFP going "oh woe is me!"
I have known a number of ENFP's, and quite frankly I see INFP's and ENFP's as being VERY similar, but maybe I'm just attracted to ENFP's that have very well developed Fi?
I've known many INTP's in my time, and many of them were quite open and frank about their general lack of regard for time, their "very low" desire for social interaction, their obliviousness to other people and how their are doing, etc.
Again, I am not some depressed "woe is me and my horrible life" INFP. I was, however, trying to offer encouragement and suggestions to INFP's who might see themselves that way.