well i notice that ENFPs that have the most balanced Ne and Fi have a very well developed Te. The way i like to think of the tertiary function is like a translator between two scholars that speak different languages, Ne and Fi. the better Te translates the better Ne and Fi work together...
shit... I'm doomed!![]()
I prefer to avoid being concerned about certain things like "lack of Fi"... why bother worrying about silly things like that when there's a WORLD to explore!
and Xenu just isn't my man(how can anyone take something seriously that reminds you so incredibly namewise of Xena?!?
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well i notice that ENFPs that have the most balanced Ne and Fi have a very well developed Te. The way i like to think of the tertiary function is like a translator between two scholars that speak different languages, Ne and Fi. the better Te translates the better Ne and Fi work together...
ok heres an example: if you dont have Te well developed then you will notice a split between Ne and Fi. I notice that emotionally unintelligent ENFPs tend to come up with oodles of great ideas, but they cant pull all of those little ideas together to make a big idea because of a lack of Te. it really pulls an ENFP together as a person. ties all the loose ends i guess you could say. it gives them focus. it also allows them to deal with confrontation quite a bit easier. really though, what i said about it pulling the ideas together, is what is really important.That sounds interesting, as Te was actually on my list to improve. I suck at organizing...big time. Could you give me a for instance though as to how you see Te translating for Ne and Fi? I have trouble putting abstracts into practise untill I get a for instance![]()
take discrete mathmatics (crazy class) lol. but seriously... i just developed mine by standing back and looking at all my ideas as a whole and pulling them together. many people would argue that this is Ne at work. imho it isn't. notice the standing back part. when T's make decisions they stand back from situations and logically deduce what to do. thats a quick and dirty description but i hope you see where im getting at. if you look on google for "extroverted thinking ENFP" there should be sites explaining the Te in regards to an ENFP in which case you can intuitivly figure it out. if you cant find a link ill find one for you![]()
What is "overbearing Ne," exactly?
How could I correct you for wrong when I myself am not familiar with the concept?
Anyway:
It's impossible to take in all the world without analyzing or judging. There are too many laws, and you'd be hard pressed to find a thing you don't have to pay for. On top of that, you wouldn't even be able to take anything in -- it would all be passing fancy.
The best advice I can give is to continue on the track you've started -- trusting functions.
The rail you need to get off of is the one containing stereotypes.
Study the essence of these functions and you'll be able to figure it all out for yourself. I assure you, reading an online function description, or even worse, and online type description, as alluring as they are (and therein lies the appeal of typology marketing) is absolutely the most dangerous alley any newbie can find himself in.