niffer
New member
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2007
- Messages
- 1,217
- MBTI Type
- ENfP
- Enneagram
- 8w9
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
You, me and we can dress Toonia's bunny up like Lagomorph. Yeah baby.![]()
..hehehe
You, me and we can dress Toonia's bunny up like Lagomorph. Yeah baby.![]()
What's the last silly thing you did?
What was the joke, Pinko?
I already told my mom the joke I'm going to (re)reveal on her death bed.
Edahn: Knock knock.
My mom: *looks puzzled*
Edahn: Say "who's there?"
Mom: Oh, sorry! "Who's there?"
Edahn: DEATH!
I sang Patsy Cline’s classic “Crazy” to my children in the voice of Elmer Fudd:
Cwazy
Cwazy for feewing so wonewy...
I’m cwazy
Cwazy for feewing so bwue...
That was last week, though. I know I’ve done silly things since then.
My cousin especially (INFJ) is very serious about her relationships and about her reputation. I think the reason why serious people are serious is partly learned, and party because they need to maintain control by monitoring themselves to avoid being hurt, rejected, or embarrassed by the judgments/evaluations of others (family, friends, cohorts, lovuhs). It sucks because these people lose their spontaneity and joie de vivre in the process which makes life beautiful and satisfying. Enter Silly Therapy (tm!).
The concept behind Silly Therapy (tm). Silly Therapy (tm) is a simple technique for learning how to give up control and break free of burdensome self-monitoring.
Even the hokey-pokey!
I hadn't realized the OP referred to INFJs. I think that type can be too serious. I know I am much of the time. I am pretty silly in private, and actually kinda weird.I so need silly therapy.You have NO idea how tiresome it is to always self-monitor (or maybe you do), but I can't seem to stop doing it. I loathe that I do it, and it's not healthy for my body/spirit either.
Publically I am serious with an occasional, unexpected ridiculous behavior that shocks everyone. That is what makes being serious deliciously fun. There is nothing I enjoy more than letting people put me in a box only to pop out the moment they think they have me figured out.![]()
An ESFP that I'm good friends with practically makes it his life goal to be a complete and total ass. I think one of my favorites is when he ran around jumping on chairs as a demented captain planet wearing a pair of tightie whities on the outside of his clothes and purple marker smeared all over his face.
I've always danced. That's usually how I retreated into my head, pretended I was dancing with someone or on stage performing to the radio. So I never really got that self conscious about dancing in front of people. Most don't pay attention to you anyway. School dances, I'd move to a corner so I had enough room to bounce around, and now I go to con raves and it's a whole lot of fun.![]()
Disagreed! If you're practicing controlled silliness, it's tricky. But if you really let yourself go, you can absolutely change your mindset. The physical actions are just vehicles to help you let go.
So you didn't disagree with me. It starts with an open mind towards silliness, not doing silly things.
What makes silliness so much better than seriousness?
p.s. here's my contribution, picture-wise. I think this was taken a year or two ago. I'm not sure what I was saying, but I have a belt around my neck and that's the important thing.
I looooove dancing. Sometimes, I feel a LITTLE self conscious, but the more I'm dancing the less self conscious I feel.If I'm in the corner, I kinda start bopping around... but then I eventually want to go on the dance floor and let loose. haha. I actually have the most dancing fun with my INFP cousin. We're kinda quiet at first... slowly start bopping around near the wall... and then we just go on the dance floor & go nuts.
There's nothing better than showing people they've underestimated you.
(P.S. That's not silly.)
Anyways, my picture is vastly superior to anything else that's been posted. Probably on the whole site.