While I may doubt the typing of every single person in this thread... you, I'm convinced, got it right. And I love that this is something you want for yourself. The OP, as commonplace as it may seem...simply a "new, ENFP member looking for some writer's tips"...is significant to me. The fact it was even created at all tells me this is real for you and it persuades me. I am posting because I now want this for you too.
Your reasoning however...I know all too well how that kind of reasoning comes about. I know the map. I know what you are detouring (ignoring) inside of yourself that causes you to arrive at a place where you're actually expressing something as faulty as "Usually ENFP'S write very long stories (mark twain), do you think I might be doing something wrong?"
Your response above tells me that you are probably not quite ready to see in yourself what you're working so hard to keep hidden and that is okay. But in this instance please listen closely to my "writer's advice". Do not convince yourself that there is something wrong with you or that you have a problem. I know you don't want to give-up in your awareness and so do not let the hidden parts of you try to convince you of something completely unreasonable like..."I'm ENFP and so it follows that if I can't write like Twain fairly effortlessly something's wrong with me" There is no hack. There is no easy.
The only way for you to reach the basic novel standard is to keep on writing until you reach the basic novel standard. You can do it.
Thank you! I know i'll get there one day. It'll take me some time, but I guess that's part of the craft. I even did so much research on this as well, and it's funny, some of them were technical responses, and others told me to just write, and then fix it later, and the fact that your story is as long as it needs t be. I think this has gotten in front of my craft, because i'm so scared of disappointing myself to the point that I don't even try anymore, which makes me even more mad.
It just sucks when people gloat about having 100,000 word counts when you're trying to build up your way there, you know? But I have to remember, it's practice, and craft.
I have gotten some critiques for my books and a lot of them say I miss detail, but when I do add detail, it's like nobody glances at it. People will leave lazy reviews and it's like: is the extra description even needed?
I think I work better in first person than third person, but I have gotten so used to third person, that I forgot how to write in first. But writing in third person makes me feel so distant from my characters, no matter how much depth I put into the character.
That's great! I showed my sister the personality test and descriptions (she's a total INTP), and she told me i'm more of an ENTP type, despite my diplomatic personality.