No, I totally get the point. And privacy wasn't even an issue. Here's my point: Why does the Fe-dom tell their neighbors that everything is brilliant when it's not? Why not give a neutral response instead of a "everything is freakin' awesome" - that, to me, is faking the funk. That's all - I didn't miss the point. I get privacy. I never said people need to tell their neighbors everything. that would be silly. What I'm saying is...don't take it to the other extreme and be like, "Oh yeah, my life is an example of perfection" and rant about how everything is just beautiful when it really isn't.
Sorry if I'm back tracking a bit here, but there is something about this that I don't think anyone has directly discussed yet.
First of all, I know exactly what you mean. When I was young, sometimes during a disagreement with my mom, the phone would ring, and she would pick up the phone and be so
nice and happy on the phone, and it would make me sooooo mad. I completely understand why she did it that way and I would probably do the same thing, but Fe-user or no, it doesn't make you feel good when you know about the conflict and see the contrast between real feelings and behavior.
Your situation with the neighbors is probably the same. Privacy is one thing, but I don't think the whole 'happy' front is entirely about privacy. Don't forget that Fe is externally-oriented and one thing it does naturally is picking up emotional/social cues. If your neighbor says "Well, we've been through ups and downs" and doesn't look that happy, the Fe-radar will immediately go "Alert! Unhappy person!" and the Fe-user will be compelled to fix the situation by asking how they feel, if they need to vent, if they need any help, etc. Now, if you want privacy, why would you want to go through all that in the first place? It's a lot easier to just say that everything is great to avoid further questions and avoid burdening your neighbor's Fe to care. (Normally, people will assume other people think the same way, so Fe-users will assume that other people are also Fe-users)
Another point that hasn't been said directly is the "Fe team spirit". No matter what is going on inside, once you're a team, you're supposed to put up a happy front for other people if you don't want their help. (Their Fe will be compelled to 'help' if they suspect unhappiness) I agree that this can be taken way too far, but I can share a situation where this
doesn't happen. At one party, my INFP bf got mad at me midway through (for reasons I did not know at first) and stopped talking to me, refused to sit next to me on the bus home, etc. Yes, he was being 'true' to his feelings, but it caused a lot of a) gossip b) people asking him if he was feeling all right all night, which annoyed him c) people asking me if there were problems between us d) people judging him to be a unsociable because he was sullen the whole evening -- all of which could have been avoided. (The idea situation for this would have been: him pulling me to the side and saying why he was mad at me, us agreeing to leave early saying that we were tired, going home and fixing things between us without involving other people)
I agree that whole 'sooo happy' thing can be taken way too far, in which case could be a cognitive dissonance strategy (if we say things are okay, maybe things
will be okay, etc.), but that's a totally different issue.
I guess what I'm trying to say is what other types see as being "fake" is actually more like "navigation", based on the ideal of social harmony. For Fe-users, the whole world is about the flow of the Fe language, it's like a bowl of water, where every little disturbance causes ripples in all directions. You are a water molecule connected to all other water molecules, and if you're a good person, you
don't want to cause a stir. Most Fe behaviors are motivated by just that.
