AgentF
Unlimited Dancemoves ®
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2010
- Messages
- 1,543
- MBTI Type
- ENFP
- Enneagram
- 7w6
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/so
At least personally, if I'm making negative comments about someone - even if they seem superficial - it's because I honestly think they are harmful in some way. ENFPs really do have a hard time not speaking what is, to us, personal truth, because we feel a certain degree of responsibility to share our perception. What kind of friend would I be if I saw negative things coming and said nothing? I suppose I could just live and let live, but I treasure the people around me for calling me out and setting me straight when I'm doing something harmful to myself, and I feel like I owe my friends the same - moreso the more they are important to me.
agreed. ENFPs miss very little detail when it comes to people. we detect nuances in speech...eye twitches...pauses in communication...tension in your voice...discrepancies between what you say and do. can you imagine how exhausting it would be to keep all this inside? we see both the good in people but also much of the shite they think they're hiding. doesn't mean we're always right in our conclusions, but we pick up a lot of detail. so speaking out is a pressure release valve of sorts that is also directly related to our sense of integrity. i frequently vocalize what i see to my friends, and if it gets to be too much, i am usually quick to pick up on that. (as was noted, when all else fails just smack us with the Te stick--NTJs are particularly good about that.)
but i will NOT keep my mouth shut if i detect something that will negatively affect someone i care about. and i care about most people.

However, I also do have a bad tendency to make snippy remarks when I feel like someone hasn't taken me seriously, or is being completely oblivious to a bad situation. You know it's going to hurt the people involved and probably the people around them and you've tried to stop it but nothing's changed - it gets frustrating, like watching a train wreck from above and not being able to do anything.
i know, right? i feel helpless to influence those kinds of situations (and we are pretty good at influencing situations, so we feel incredibly frustrated when we see an ugly inevitability. what bullshit to simply smile and nod when you see someone putting their hand in the blender.)
I think almost every person on this planet is selfish without realizing it.

I think people tend to see ENFPs' shiny exteriors and forget that inside we are serious, anxious, and broody creatures. We hide that side of ourselves to protect both you and us.
beautifully put. we're a very sensitive breed that experiences both sides of every emotional extreme. we can barely manage to reign it in: what kind of stink bomb would hit the rest of the world if we were to expose you to it? the joy you see has a very worrisome twin.
(a friend once asked me why i was always so cheerful. so i explained that it really wasn't the case, but that i chose to latch onto the happy side of things despite an awareness of The Ugly. she mockingly asked me "what do you know about ugly" so i let her into that world a bit. she then looked at me like i had just escaped from the crematorium at Auschwitz.)