Lethe
Obsession.
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2007
- Messages
- 801
- MBTI Type
- iNtJ
- Enneagram
- 152
- Instinctual Variant
- so/sx
Well, for instance, during the months of May and June, I have Mother's Day, my mother's birthday, Father's day and my parents' anniversary. When I first realized it, I thought, that's a lot of fucking holidays for 2 people. Why do I have to spend money on something they'll forget in a few months? Maybe I can get a much smaller amount of presents to cover each holiday. I can be strategic about it. One gift to cover the sentiment of multiple holidays. Why do they need these holidays? I can understand the birthday and anniversary, but mother's and father's day? Don't they feel appreciated throughout the year? What's the point of the holiday? If I do too much, it might feel fake and isolated. I'll just get a card.
Precisely. Just last Mother's day, I was obligated to write 5 personal letters, each for an aunt or grandmother. (Why on earth is one card per person, per year not enough? :steam

When we visit relatives, they often require us to fulfill the hosting role without being directly asked. The point was to 'appear' like caring, responsible and good-natured young adults, whatever that means. My mother boasts of how wonderful her friend's children are: they inquire about their parents' well-being and immediately look after others' needs on their own. However, this idea is about as understandable to me as philosophy is to a chimpanzee. If you need help... then how about asking for it?

But, like, for instance, an ISFJ at work came up to me to buy something on her lunch break. We had these preorder forms for customers and she was doing one of them for herself. So, I gave her the form and a pen. She asked me why I didn't fill out the form for the customers. I told her right there, "I don't know the customer's personal information." She said she just does it anyway. I thought, I'd likely have to get their driver's license and credit card, then write it all down myself, probably taking more time. It'd be more efficient for them to do it. I didn't tell her that, but I was just trying to understand her point of view. It wasn't required to do it, but it was something she did just to be nice.
I'd probably question her reasons. It sounds like a kind gesture, but is it necessary? Would they appreciate it? Unless you're working with the physically handicapped or the dyslexic, I'm not sure why this needs to be done. I would ask if there was any other effective way of assisting customers. The best choices should benefit both parties.
This thread started because an INFJ at work was talking to me before we left. It wasn't a work related concern but more of a personal concern apparently. During our conversation she told me, "You're mean. Why are you mean? Let's talk about that." So, she went on to ask that ISFJ if she thought I was mean and she agreed. I told her about a girl earlier I talked to that said I was mean and feisty after 5 minutes of talking to me. She said not everyone can take everything I want to say, and I shouldn't expect everyone to not take anything personally. She said it was better to be nice and have friends than to expect others to have a thick skin and not have anyone to talk to. So, it made me start thinking about this.
Even though I'm not in your situation, "let's talk about that" already sounds like a code expression for the arsehole blame game. There's too much manipulation, one-sided lecturing and not enough problem-solving. A friendship where honesty has to be compromised sounds like a relationship not worth keeping at all, IMO. To whom you are tricking into thinking that you're someone other than yourself? You mainly aim for the truth, regardless of how pleasant it may or may not be. Being mean doesn't sound like your priority. It just happens.
I'd take into account the people, the environment and the results I am dealing with. For someone more thin-skinned, I'd follow the advice I mentioned in the initial post. And given I might work with customers who share her nature, I'll ask exactly why I sound offensive. What should I say instead? What if the person needs to hear the truth? There must be a happy medium for anyone to proceed further. Try to openly talk this out and see what you both agree on. Otherwise, misery is guaranteed. I'd personally like to have a clear utility purpose behind the etiquette. Everything will be easier once I've figured out a way that will motivate me to do the said behavior. Negative reinforcement can drastically drain away energy. Then you're out of fuel for sure.
For an example:
- By the end of the month, you must finish this entire pile of paperwork or else you will not receive a vacation break.
+ Or... if you finish this little stack of files each day, you'll do enough to complete the entire pile and be rewarded with a vacation.
The feeling like my worth has been lowered is the weird response. Is that Fi? I just didn't expect myself to think that the ability to relate and appreciate others in a less than logical manner would become something that would add to my worth as a human being.
I wouldn't use it to bait myself into being nice. Again, this will backfire. It's better to choose reasonable and approachable Fi values that coincide with the conclusions of the Fe values. Different methods, same results. Hey, who could argue?