Crescent Fresh
Diving into Ni-space
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2011
- Messages
- 802
- MBTI Type
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- 4w5
Have you ever cherish all of the precious, good memories of the person once in a blue moon who had doorslammed you?
Have you ever cherish all of the precious, good memories of the person once in a blue moon who had doorslammed you?
Huh?
I'm an ENFP that was doorslammed by an INFJ so I may have something to contribute to this...but I'm not quite sure what you are asking. Do I cherish the memories I have with someone that ended up believing shit about me that wasn't true and wasn't strong enough or honorable enough to admit they were totally in the wrong? No.
I know this may sound odd, but no matter how bad the outcome is (via door-slamming), I try to think about the good times that we both had (prior to the relationship turned sour). And by sour, I didn't mean it has to do with misunderstanding or conflicts. The one that I did doorslam has to do with his inconsistency of maintaining a decent amount of social contact and I felt cheated in that way. I am very selective when it comes to opening up to others, but this ENFP seems to hop from one to another once he felt he knows you too well inside-out.
It's weird, I know. However, sometimes, I do try to recall on the 'good times' that we had from the past while ignoring the 'bad' ending. But I do this really rarely.
I think that what you wrote here is a product of being the doorslammer as oppose to the doorslamee. Like in the example you just gave with regards to your ENFP…did you consult with him? Did you discuss with him your concerns? How his behavior made you feel? Did you give him a chance to change his behavior? Or did you just make this decision on your own to shut him out of your life?
When you are shut-out in the way I was, without consultation or explanation, it does sorta leave you to question what was real and what wasn’t. Ruminating on the ‘good times’ seems kinda ridiculous to be honest. Did they even exist? How could they have existed in the way that I think they did if someone can treat you in this manner? No…they must not have existed. And so I will not think of them.
Note though…that I have met so many wonderful INFJs on this site that do not use the doorslam in the way it was used on me. The INFJs on this site are some of the most beautiful people I will ever encounter in my lifetime.
Have you ever cherish all of the precious, good memories of the person once in a blue moon who had doorslammed you?
Yes, I did consult with him but he kept denying there's any issue. Unfortunately, I can truly sense that there's something bodering him but he's just trying to avoid. I can feel the cold distance which isn't the same as before (he never forgets any close friends' birthday, including mine, except for this year). He's also one of the most sensitive people that I know and I just felt he wouldn't want to confront it to me in order to not hurting my feelings (one of the common ENFP traits as well). Though there have been episodes when the situation is reversed, he tried hard to confront with me and wanting to know what bodered me. I just felt this is so unfair and I felt helpless to fix our relationship. And it took me nearly 4 months to doorslam him btw, so I've put enough consideration as I don't want to waste my time to invest on someone who has no intention of resolve a conflict.
Perhaps that's how he has planned? I really have no idea but it seems to me that's what he's been waiting for (he knew that I had doorslammed others in the past).
Same here. Actually that's the only bad experience I had with an ENFP. While others and I got along exceptionally fine. The problem is that we're all part of the same circle, so it just makes me harder to do this.
More questions:
1. Whenever you 'unintentionally' change our conversational topics by adding a new topic, do you feel guilty of doing so? (from my observation, they rarely feel guilty about this)
Have you ever cherish all of the precious, good memories of the person once in a blue moon who had doorslammed you?
More questions:
1. Whenever you 'unintentionally' change our conversational topics by adding a new topic, do you feel guilty of doing so? (from my observation, they rarely feel guilty about this)
2. Most of you claim to see the best in everyone and that we're all equal; though it seems deep inside, you refuse to believe that as that will make you seem less unique. How would you explain about such contradiction?
CrescentFresh said:Perhaps that's how he has planned? I really have no idea but it seems to me that's what he's been waiting for (he knew that I had doorslammed others in the past).
Yes, I did consult with him but he kept denying there's any issue. Unfortunately, I can truly sense that there's something bodering him but he's just trying to avoid. I can feel the cold distance which isn't the same as before (he never forgets any close friends' birthday, including mine, except for this year). He's also one of the most sensitive people that I know and I just felt he wouldn't want to confront it to me in order to not hurting my feelings (one of the common ENFP traits as well). Though there have been episodes when the situation is reversed, he tried hard to confront with me and wanting to know what bodered me. I just felt this is so unfair and I felt helpless to fix our relationship. And it took me nearly 4 months to doorslam him btw, so I've put enough consideration as I don't want to waste my time to invest on someone who has no intention of resolve a conflict.
i can still appreciate good times i had that included them, but i probably won't be appreciating the memory just because they were there. if someone decides to shut me out of their life, especially if i don't understand why, i probably will feel a certain "bitterness" attached to their memory... and i'll tend not to retain a major fondness for them beyond a very sort of idealistic nebulous love for humanity that happens to include them. i have also doorslammed exactly one person (with full disclosure as to why), and i don't really retain much fondness for her, either. i can appreciate her as a person - she has some fun and beautiful qualities - and i can appreciate the memories we had together (riding the bus, homeroom, hanging out), but i don't really appreciate her on a warm fuzzy level anymore. i think that's true for people who have doorslammed me too. the warm fuzzy dissipates.
Another one: I know it's very hard for ENFPs to take criticisms and they tend to take it very personally. But I felt even for constructive criticism, they tend to not take it easily as well. For example, I once told him that it makes him look pretty bad if he choose to reply on almost all the threads on one single page (he was being hyper mode back then). He then refuted me by asking me if I've "considered" his feelings by asking such question as he's just trying to be friendly. At that point I just gave up. I was honestly trying to offer him a sound advice but he took it way too personally (well, it has to do with maturity as well).
When it comes to offering advice.. find the nicest way possible to put it. In a way that makes it sound like "You know you really got the point across when you said it like this.." or "Can you explan this to me? I don't think I understood it.. Oh I see. I guess this format you wrote it in confused me is all.. I liked it when you wrote it like x."I know it sounds almost childish to do things that way but... ENFPs are sorta like big kids.
Another one: I know it's very hard for ENFPs to take criticisms and they tend to take it very personally. But I felt even for constructive criticism, they tend to not take it easily as well. For example, I once told him that it makes him look pretty bad if he choose to reply on almost all the threads on one single page (he was being hyper mode back then). He then refuted me by asking me if I've "considered" his feelings by asking such question as he's just trying to be friendly. At that point I just gave up. I was honestly trying to offer him a sound advice but he took it way too personally (well, it has to do with maturity as well).
So my question is: is it better not to offer any advice to you unless you're asking for it? Because that's exactly what he told me to do it for him.
ENFP picks up a muffin, takes a bite, grabs another muffin, takes a bite, grabs another muffin, takes a bite. Then in remorse, tries to glue together all three muffins, creating something that looks like a monster. Gets scared, drops mutant muffin and runs away.
Dear ENFPs,
Is Elfboy ENFP?