Jive A Turkey
New member
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2007
- Messages
- 151
- MBTI Type
- INFP
My mother is dominant Si and she has a strong fear of travel. The two seem like they could be connected based on the information in this post.
curious. So how do you define it now?
*waits for sparkling insight from INFJ*
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My mother is dominant Si and she has a strong fear of travel. The two seem like they could be connected based on the information in this post.
eh, it's hard to explain. it clicks finally, though. stupid Ni...
i could define it, but it wouldn't be very sparkly lol. it would just be reiterating certain things that have already been said.
actually, it kind of reminds me of confirmation bias.
ISTJ...following a set process is comfortable for her, and it's enjoyable. If she doesn't have a process set out, she's way out of her comfort zone and she feels stressed.
...need for closure - to have everything decided and planned in advance.
ISFJ...but her focus is on people, not abstract tasks. She is the ultimate hostess.
...gets way out of her comfort zone if she's in a people situation which she hasn't come across before.
...doesn't know what the 'correct' thing to do is, so she gets stressed...
...can't comprehend not doing things for people, like baking a cake on someone's birthday for everyone she works with. Because that is part of her mental picture of the world.
... It's not motivated by wanting other people to feel at ease or comfortable (because, frankly, her excessive hostessing can sometimes make me very uncomfortable, but she does it anyway because it's the right thing to do in her eyes).
Funny how all those descriptions of Si make me uncomfortable... It's like I have to turn myself inside out to get a sense of Si. Weird!
Hm... How to explain that??
What do you mean?
YupIt is like the details do not exist unless we are reminded of them... or that they somehow become linked to other parts of the idea in meaningful connections do we think about them.
Are we talking Ni or Si hereI think Ni likes to focus on how some parts of objects relates to other things. To bring all the little details into focus is to overwhelm the mind. Imagine each piece is related to Nth number of other ones. For every single piece you integrate into the model, the number of related pieces goes up by the power of n. A computer has difficulties handling such inputs, let along the human mind with our limited discrete memory.
Are we talking Ni or Si here?
With Ni, I don't really mind having too many details to deal with, because I've developed tactics to deal with them. For example, I have learned how to discriminate between the important details and the less important ones (for example, recognise the main tenets of a theory from the tangential ones), so that I can focus on only the important ones at first. And if there really are too many important details, then I just pick some of them to work with right away and I put the others on a shelf so to speak, and I trust that I will get back to them sooner or later.
But I don't know how to do that with Si. I don't know how to recognise the important sensory inputs from the non-important ones, and I don't know how to selectively pick some and how to dismiss others. So I have to deal with them all at once, and obviously I can't do that, so my mind quickly explodes.
I think I see what you mean. If a sensory input, or a memory, fits within a pattern I've identified, I can integrate it within it. But if it doesn't fit anywhere, then it's just too much work to keep track of it, so I let it go.I meant how Ni and Si handles data differently. I find that for myself, because I'm N dominant, things have to fit together for me to work with them. Isolated facts (the details) recalled by Si usually do not fit. So I either ignore them or to find a way to stick it in with the other stuff. Otherwise I go offtopic because I couldn't handling working with two patterns simultaneously.
Huh. Alien.I like to think of Ni applying filters on information. Things that fit gets to stay, and things than do not doesn't even register. Si takes an opposite approach. An object has all its details. How parts of the object relates to other patterns however are not considered.
Yes. Details that fit into patterns are recalled no matter how obscured they might be. I also have that happen to me. Some things I know are incorrect, but because of some weird connection made in the past I can start laughing at inappropriate times. For example Jenga is a perfectly neutral word/game... yet if you mention it, I have an uncontrollable urge to laugh.I think I see what you mean. If a sensory input, or a memory, fits within a pattern I've identified, I can integrate it within it. But if it doesn't fit anywhere, then it's just too much work to keep track of it, so I let it go.
For example, that's how I remember people's birthdays, most of the time (those I do remember, anyway...): by integrating it into a pattern with someone else's b-day, or an important event, or something like that. For example, I am barely starting to remember my 5yo son's b-day on its own: up to now, I remembered that his was 3 days before mine, and there was even a time when I had to actually count back the years to remember what year he was born
And sometimes it backfires too, when my mind accidentally creates a wrong pattern to remember something (like this actor's name, Zachary Quinto: for some stupid reason, my mind made a connection between Quinto and Joachim, and now my first reaction whenever I think of him is to call him Joachim Quinto :steam: I *know* his first name is Zach, but no! My mind is stuck on Joachim, grr...)
Is that what you meant? Or at least close?
Filter... I see the unconscious mind filtering everything before passing it off to our conscious (although preconscious will be a better descriptor) mind. Inputs that fits are allowed to interact with other ideas in the mind. Those that do not fit are rejected immediately... before our conscious mind can even register their presence.Huh. Alien.
Introverted Sensing - Recalling past experiences, remembering detailed data and what it is linked to. Introverted Sensing often involves storing data and information, then comparing and contrasting the current stimulation with similar ones. The immediate experience or words are instantly linked with the prior experiences and one registers that there is a similarity or a difference - for example, noticing that some food doesn't taste the same and is saltier than it usually is. Introverted Sensing is also operating when you see someone who reminds you of someone else. Sometimes the feeling-tone associated with the recalled image comes into your awareness along with the information itself. Then the image can be so strong, your body responds as if reliving the experience. This could be seen as a source of feelings of nostalgia or longing for the way things were. In one instance, a young couple living in Europe spent their weekends trying out restaurants looking for food that tasted like American food.