Sorry, I 'hun' everyone, it's force of habit, but plz tell me if I do it again. Know I don't do it on purpose though.
And you're still the main focus in this thread it would appear...Is 'cupcake' allowed?
you're good, I just have bad memories of being called that very condescendingly by old women when I was younger, but no, cupcake probably isn't so great either
it seems you are observing result whilst I am observing intention. the general pattern seems to be
1) Elfboy draws attention to himself inadvertantly
2) people are drawn to Elfboy and seem very entertained, so Elfboy just keeps doing what he's doing
3) people continue to enjoy Elfboy's behavior, but eventually start to think "dude, shut up!"
4) Elfboy does not notice this immediately and has to ask for feedback, which others IRL are reluctant to give
5) Elfboy has trouble getting out of the spot light (even though he usually wants to) because his preferred activities/comments seem to draw attention to themselves and he doesn't want to just stop all activity all together
6) eventually people burst on Elfboy and he feels he must deal with them swiftly to disincentize the uncouth behavior. the problem is, people tend to attack in packs
now that this is explained
back to INFP/ENFP differences. does anyone know how many types of extroversion there are in the first place
for instance, some types are
1) MBTI/cognitive introversion- dominant cognitive function is E or I
2) social introversion- preference for being with people as opposed to preference for more solitary or 1 on 1 activities
3) psychological introversion- where one draws energy
4) Big 5/trait introversion- communication style (extraverted being more gregarious, assertive and unrestrained, introverted being more reserved, more subtle and lower energy)
for example, an ISTJ CEO would probably score pretty high on trait extroversion while an ENTJ might score low on social extroversion and an ENFP might score low on psychological extroversion. any thoughts on correlations?