Jung thought it was advantageous but psychologically draining to falsify one's type in order to satisfy conditions without. This most typically is brought on by parenting.
What is your experience with this phenomenon?
Well assuming this is the cause I've had extensive experience with this, especially when I was growing up. Essentially I was always constantly being pressured to act a certain way or appropriate myself socially. This conflicted with what I usually wanted to do so I acted out, grew angry and argued.
But that's fairly standard childhood stuff, however the far reaching consequences of this became more apparent as I grew older. Constant reprimands for doing the slightest things out of 'the norm' and being shouted at had made me very nervous of doing the wrong thing. But I instinctively understood that the wrong thing was context based and so it was impossible not to upset others, so I didn't bother, however I was often extremely quiet and distant for a long time after my early childhood and I seemed to have lost some of my fighting spirit.
From the outside this probably made me look very rule abiding, but it was more that I was avoiding conflict. However my anger would still rear itself when pushed to the limit, look at the string of jobs I've quit over the years. This also brings me into my next issue, which is that I've found most jobs intolerably difficult.
This is because most of them require a certain on the ball engagement, not to mention an intense attention to detail that borders on the insane.
In a way it was a good growth opportunity and I have become more tolerant of it, but it's still extremely draining. I tend to see things best in leaps and bounds of understanding, with a little bit of information acquisition as well but rote memorising is lost on me and possibly why I struggled at school.
What type I might be I may always be unsure of, feeling as I do between types, but there is an unmistakable influence of stress resulting from forcing myself to act in a way I am not cognitively attuned to.