Mmm...question..how do you feel sympathy/empathy integrates with your Fe?
What I mean is - there's a lot of talk about maintaining the mood, working the room for harmony, and feeling inferior and guilty if you disrupt the environment without at least turning it into something better. Meanwhile though, Fe is also tied with sympathy and understanding of people. So how does the merging of that desire to maintain harmony and dealing with disruptive people work? What makes the scales tip in favour of helping them and sympathising with them and what makes it tip the other way, where they'll be scolded for disrupting the environment?
Sorry for the late reply! Busy weekend and busy school week.
Also, fair warning: Not sure what of my reply is more Fe, and what is more 9. Either way, it is me
The "feeling guilty for disrupting the environment" thing you mentioned is
so real for me. For example, if I'm hanging out with a couple of my friends and say or do something that they perceive to be even
slightly annoying or irritation (whether it be from what I said or because I was talking to loud, or whatever), if they react with any level or irritation whatsoever, I shut down for a few minutes. Situations like these actually kind of make me want to run off somewhere to be alone for a few minutes to cry, but I can't do that. So instead, I refrain from talking or doing anything else until the moment is passed and is forgotten. Although, as I'm someone who's hyper-concerned with keeping a harmonic atmosphere at all times, this rarely happens to me.
Disruptive people at work... oh no. Okay, so I used to work in customer service, right? Yeah. Not the best. Actually, most of the customers were really nice to me, because I always had this enthusiastic, helpful vibe (even tho half the time I am dead on the inside). Most of the time things went really well. But sometimes... they don't. One time a customer came in and--well, he wasn't actually ever rude to me--but he asked to use the phone at my desk that customers can use, so of course I allowed him to. He called someone up and starting cussing them out over the phone really loudly. Yelling screaming and cursing everywhere. I was so in shock that I didn't even know what to do... so I just continued to help whoever it is I was helping awkwardly (a manager ran over to stop him shortly after). It made me super uncomfortable--I wasn't personally offended by any of what he was doing, but I knew that it "wasn't okay" that it was happening in a public grocery store full of other people who might find it highly offensive. But really, I
don't know what to do in situations like that other than recognize the problem. A manager had to do it for me.
A few times I'd dealt with generally pissy/angry/mean customers. And it really hurt, or mad me mad or sad. No one would have veer guessed it though--I always reacted by continuing to be polite and civil, acting as though they'd never said anything rude to me or that I hadn't heard it at all. Even though I
definitely did and probably bitched about it over text to a friend on my break afterwards or was otherwise deeply affected by in in some way.
And when those negative instances occurred... it
really affected me. Like, I didn't just move on. Everything else around me did--my work day did, the customers came and went--but I'd still be shaky and disoriented for hours afterward. Especially after the time my manager got mad at me because I couldn't find the vendor book after he relocated everything at the customer service desk, found it again and slammed it down on the table in front of me super loudly. I almost started crying, and I was shaken up for the rest of the day (and found it very difficult and awkward to talk to that manager after that).
I can be pretty hyper-aware of dynamics. This is something I've only realized recently, because it used to happen so unconsciously for me. We all know I have my "How can I make my Fe not suck" thread where I whine that my Fe sucks, but actually I think it's just because I was operating under the wrong definition of Fe, and because what Fe I did have, I was blind to because I was so "used" to it.
Now, scolding someone for disrupting the environment is another story. I don't do the scolding, I'm way too timid for that.

I simply bitch about their behavior to a friend or something afterward to vent. Venting is how I let go.