Skyward
Badoom~
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2008
- Messages
- 1,084
- MBTI Type
- infj
- Enneagram
- 9w1
^ That's one of the few constants between INFJs. If someone tells you something like that about themselves; it's likely they're an INFJ.
Ni: Everything is connected in some way. All things are in a web of the Big Picture (Which, depending on your view on life, could be a god or just the System of the Cold Cold Universe). Our minds ride the rails of this web as far as our human minds can allow us. We pick a direction, seeing a goal in the horizon, and follow the line, hopefully reaching a clean conclusion and a train of thought that can let us achieve the goal in reality. In some areas of the Web the rails are clean and smooth, other days they're rusty and have large gaps in places. These gaps can either be our mind not being able to cope with the Web's design and massive scope, or the fact that the connection is vague or forced at best.
That's why we're so zoney. We're thinking up odd metaphors like the one above
You know you’re INFJ when your favorite local coffee shop stops making your favorite drink and your reaction is to instantly reflect on the impermanence of absolutely everything. All the moments in your life- where you’ve realized you’d been taking some meaningful relationship to something/someone in the external world for granted, because that something/someone suddenly isn’t ready-at-hand available anymore (plus a vague sense of similar events that haven’t even happened yet)- suddenly merge into one big blur and it flashes before your eyes in that split second after you’ve realized your favorite drink is gone.
Ni: Everything is connected in some way. All things are in a web of the Big Picture (Which, depending on your view on life, could be a god or just the System of the Cold Cold Universe). Our minds ride the rails of this web as far as our human minds can allow us. We pick a direction, seeing a goal in the horizon, and follow the line, hopefully reaching a clean conclusion and a train of thought that can let us achieve the goal in reality. In some areas of the Web the rails are clean and smooth, other days they're rusty and have large gaps in places. These gaps can either be our mind not being able to cope with the Web's design and massive scope, or the fact that the connection is vague or forced at best.
That's why we're so zoney. We're thinking up odd metaphors like the one above