KDude
New member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2010
- Messages
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To my mind the signature preference among the MBTI relating to `flow' is the only one not attributable to Jung: the J/P preference, which David Keirsey has said has more to do with closure VS open-endedness than either `judging' or `perceiving' per se.
I'm inclined to believe that those who prefer P to J would be more inclined to experience flow, but I suspect that J types can if they feel well-bounded between supposed beginnings and supposed dead-lines for any of their paint-by-numbers regions of time on their calenders, itineraries, or daily schedules.
J-ness could still entail Fi though, right (even though I'm a P type)?
Because that's all I'm joking about (being emo). I don't get situated in actions/experiences so easily. I'm not an extrovert (or rather, so into the P function that I forget everything else).