Finally! I've been trying to tell you all of this time!According to this list I could be almost as much ENTP than ENFP.![]()

Finally! I've been trying to tell you all of this time!According to this list I could be almost as much ENTP than ENFP.![]()
Fixed!ENFP's are like ENTP's with heartsthat pump a vile acid.
I posted this elsewhere and would like input from ENFPs and ENTPs cause it's all conjecture.
An ENFP needs to be in contact with people and influence them in a positive way.
As an ENTP I like people but mostly I just want to study them to figure out the human condition.
An ENFP could freely offer both sympathy and empathy but would find sympathy easier.
As an ENTP I'm uncomfortable with sympathy but can offer empathy.
An ENFP would be more excited about meeting new people.
As an ENTP I’m more excited about new ideas.
An ENFP wants to feel loved and supported.
As an ENTP I want to feel respected and admired.
Yes I think - especially in close relationships where strong emotions are involved.An ENFP can be quite expressive.
As an ENTP I can be less expressive.
An ENFP is more likely to adapt their emotional expressions to those they’re interacting with.
As an ENTP I’m more likely to mirror emotional expressions.
Sympathy: Feelings of pity or sorrow for someone else's misfortune
Empathy: the ability to empathize, understand and share the feelings of another.
In a lot of ways, I think the ENxPs share an inability to give up on things. This is why I think ENFPs can cling to people who show them little to no love at all. They can spend their lives trying to make a person love them, trying to connect... It's not pretty. Nor is the ENTP version.I'll add a caveat - feeling loved and supported is very important by someone I respect and admire. I hear a lot of ENFP women complain about not being taken seriously because we like to present a rather light and humorous image in real life. There's nothing more frustrating for me than being treated like a child - to be patronized or not treated as an equal in intellect. It's quite satisfying to be respected and acknowledged by someone I admire. Of course, there are strong emotional needs that are met by partners. A person who successfully lands an ENFP and manages to keep them engaged must possess a truly gargantuan capacity to love.
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How can you possibly tell? Any chance that you could be wrong?With ENTPs, it is a more obviously detached exercise of 'what would be appropriate' in this situation. They may even mirror the speaker's words or expressions but the ENTPs I know don't pass the sincerity meter regularly on this count. I can tell when it's pure Fe.
I wholly agree - even for us types that do not crave human "connection".4. For types that crave human connection, really intimate connections are actually quite difficult and painful. I find both types are quite awkward and shy at this level of contact, one on one. It's so much easier entertaining in groups. Just a thought or two based on the last few months of observation.
Sorry, no. (and you can't define a word by using the word itself...) Sympathy is sharing the feelings of others, empathy is understanding the feelings - for the most basic definition.
For a stricter definition:
http://www.typologycentral.com/forums/632794-post2.html
"Dr. Baron-Cohen: It's part of empathy. Theory of mind is being able to put yourself in somebody else's shoes, being able to imagine what's going on in his or her mind. But imagining someone else's thoughts or feelings is only part of empathy. The other part is having [an appropriate] emotional reaction. The distinction is important because a psychopath might be able to figure out somebody else's thoughts quite accurately but wouldn't necessarily have an appropriate emotional response."
I posted this elsewhere and would like input from ENFPs and ENTPs cause it's all conjecture.
What would you say are the differences between you and the other type? What do you/don’t you relate from the points below? What other consistent points of difference do you see.
An ENFP can be very sensitive and easily discouraged by other people.
As an ENTP its damn near impossible to offend, upset or discourage me.
An ENFP needs to be in contact with people and influence them in a positive way.
As an ENTP I like people but mostly I just want to study them to figure out the human condition.
An ENFP could freely offer both sympathy and empathy but would find sympathy easier.
As an ENTP I'm uncomfortable with sympathy but can offer empathy.
An ENFP would be more excited about meeting new people.
As an ENTP I’m more excited about new ideas.
An ENFP wants to feel loved and supported.
As an ENTP I want to feel respected and admired.
An ENFP sees things as right vs wrong and ethical vs unethical.
As an ENTP I see things as correct vs incorrect and logical vs illogical.
An ENFP can be quite expressive.
As an ENTP I can be less expressive.
An ENFP is more likely to adapt their emotional expressions to those they’re interacting with.
As an ENTP I’m more likely to mirror emotional expressions.
An ENFP likes to resonate with what someone else is saying and is more likely to argue using persuasion.
As an ENTP debating is sport and I have no problems switching sides, I’m more likely use facts.
An ENFP would have strong ethics.
As an ENTP many of mine are bendable.
... then I got bored, we both do that.
I know there's an ENTP vs ENFP thread floating around but it seems the fluff vs content ratio is about 17:1, I'm all for fluff but old fluff is boring, so y'all get a new thread.
In a lot of ways, I think the ENxPs share an inability to give up on things. This is why I think ENFPs can cling to people who show them little to no love at all. They can spend their lives trying to make a person love them, trying to connect... It's not pretty. Nor is the ENTP version.
How can you possibly tell? Any chance that you could be wrong?
I wholly agree - even for us types that do not crave human "connection".
Dudette, I used the dictionary, a manual one off my shelf. Quoted from it for the definitions. That's where I usually go for definitions![]()
The expansion was mine.
The only difficulty that I see is in the actual definition versus the colloquial usage, which confuses things. It is widely accepted that sympathy is a part of empathy - a natural progression. There is some understanding of what a person is going through with empathy. And you can further that emotional growth by actually feeling something on that person's behalf which is sympathy.There seems to be some real difficulty separating these two out even in the disciplinary sources you quoted.
Interesting. What is the ENTP version?
Yes, I know... I was basically telling you to get a new dictionary!![]()
The only difficulty that I see is in the actual definition versus the colloquial usage, which confuses things. It is widely accepted that sympathy is a part of empathy - a natural progression. There is some understanding of what a person is going through with empathy. And you can further that emotional growth by actually feeling something on that person's behalf which is sympathy.
Now, can you truly feel what another person is feeling with accuracy or are you projecting what you would feel in that situation, or are you just feeling pity?... well, that is debatable and way out of my league.
I feel that Fe is empathetic and Fi is sympathetic, and that's how I make sense out of those functions - and that's how I separate the ENxPs initially. I can logically know what you must probably feeling be if I see you in a bad place and adjust my behavior accordingly, but you will never see me crying on your behalf which is the domain of you wonderful and strange ENFPs.
In fact, to an Fe user, Fi seems to be able to want to upstage you and your emotions. A classic example is when something really bad happens to me, I get all riled up and upset. Then I get an email from my ENFP friend telling me that she can barely sleep and is up all night because I am hurt. She feels horrible and can't focus because of what I must be going through. And I know that's her way of explaining things, but it makes me think that she expects me to feel bad for her when I am already troubled with other things. I then spend an hour trying to calm her down and make her feel better. There has got to be a better way to view this and handle this.
What sort of response should I be giving to her instead?
I don't see them being a natural progression unless sympathy is a step towards full empathy. They're seen as separate even in the disciplines we just read extracts from. I think the problem here is that we're using the same word, empathy but to mean different things. You think of it as a detached form of shared experience or understanding while I think of it as both this cognitive part as well as the emotional. This determines what is a bigger step.
I don't believe empathy has anything to do with support at all.This is what one of the authors was referring to. On the outset, it's really difficult to differentiate between empathy and sympathy. They're both forms of expressing support - is it easy from the outside to tell whether the person expressing it is feeling pity or actually sharing the view of the recipient? I don't know, hard to distinguish as you said above.
Yes, both are capable of empathy. And both are capable of sympathy. It just depends where we are at in our emotional evolution. I think you are thinking of putting yourself in someone's shoes as more than what it is. It's more like getting where the person is coming from and seeing their perspective, rather than literally looking at life through their eyes and feeling their pain.Don't you think ENTPs and ENFPs are both capable of empathy except one does experience it more on a cognitive level whereas the other experiences it on a cognitive and emotional level. I think this is why both types are intuitive about people's needs. Both are capable of tapping into empathy. This doesn't happen a lot and is very draining. INFPs do this more. For me, the Fi-tard I am, the sympathy is easier. Because empathy requires not just feeling bad that the other person is going through something but putting myself in their shoes, much better support when I can do that but also a huge drain on resources.
It's funny... ENFPs always say that. I'm not saying that you behave anything like that, but it always makes me laugh how no one ever fesses up to it, writing the wayward person off as unhealthy. I find that behavior in a lot of ENFPs that I know.She should see someone about it.That level of dependence must be draining on you both. Seriously.
Ha! I don't enable her, I call her a drama queen and self centered. I can't count how many times I've said "this isn't about you". Wrong approach?1. For her, I'd say tell her as compassionately as possible that having two people worry and feel the fallout of the event doesn't help either, especially you who's going through it! You would feel much better if she could perhaps concentrate on solutions or just helping you talk through it/forget it -- whatever YOU need. Does she know how unhelpful she's being?
2. Also, Jeno, it's not your responsibility to make her feel better.One option is gracefully accepting the worry she has on your behalf as her way of showing concern and not another problem for which you need a solution. It's okay to say thanks - that's so kind and leave things there. Don't enable her - I can't imagine it's good for her either. Being the stronger one, you may have to cut her off for her own good to help her.
Again, I believe the difference is in the colloquial usage. I have never heard anyone speak of empathy as feeling anything in any professional context. If you choose to use the colloquial, that's fine and I'll just make a note of that. But empathy, as described in the other thread, is something doctor's must exhibit with patients - recognizing that the patient is under duress and behaving appropriately. It's what mother's do with newborns - hearing a specific cry and associating it with a certain need. Empathy is the basic understanding. Sympathy is a step toward feeling something on behalf of the person. It's the difference between stepping over a homeless person while realizing that he must be cold, and actually giving him your jacket or crying for him.
I don't believe empathy has anything to do with support at all.
Yes, both are capable of empathy. And both are capable of sympathy. It just depends where we are at in our emotional evolution. I think you are thinking of putting yourself in someone's shoes as more than what it is. It's more like getting where the person is coming from and seeing their perspective, rather than literally looking at life through their eyes and feeling their pain.
It's funny... ENFPs always say that. I'm not saying that you behave anything like that, but it always makes me laugh how no one ever fesses up to it, writing the wayward person off as unhealthy. I find that behavior in a lot of ENFPs that I know.
Ha! I don't enable her, I call her a drama queen and self centered. I can't count how many times I've said "this isn't about you". Wrong approach?![]()
It's not just the colloquial usage though. They're related. That's a very narrow interpretation and doesn't follow from the sources you used and the ones I read and quoted above. It was an attempt to understand and apply what the authors were saying above, including the Hojat article quoted above - I don't think that came through.
Empathy is not just responding to the person's needs - that is simple care. Mothers too, recognizing that a baby cries and responding appropriately is simply providing care. The authors are concerned about empathy because they are interested in how caring for the person affects the quality of care doctors provide. "Defined as a personal quality in the uncritical understanding of a patient's inner experiences and feelings, empathy is the essence of a meaningful patient-doctor relationship" (Hojat et al. Medical Education 2002). That sounds a little more than just a detached understanding of the person's condition and providing appropriate care.
Again, empathy is not about the physical response - I am illustrating that the emotional component actually makes empathy into sympathy. That's the point. Feeling bad WITH someone is different than realizing that someone would feel bad in a particular situation (and not wanting to be the cause of that pain is something also associated with empathy). Empathy is basic and is learned in childhood. Most sociopaths, especially those with NPD, never learned empathy. It is the consensus that sympathy cannot exist without empathy because it is a natural progression. When a child learns that s/he is a separate entity from its surroundings and that other people have feelings too, this is when empathy is learned. "You don't pull mommy's hair because it hurts her when you do that. Don't you remember that time when your brother pulled your hair?" Sympathy comes after empathy in the emotional evolution. Not only do you realize that others have feelings, but you also tune into those feelings yourself. You are capable of feeling bad on mommy's behalf. Sympathy separates tragedy from comedy. I'm not going to go back and forth any more about this, it's really not important.From the examples you gave above, the reaction or state of the observor (empathy or sympathy) and their action (stepping over or giving them a jacket) are actually separate things. While crying for someone else's pain seems to be connected to sympathy (feeling for), it may also be empathy if it is seen as having an emotional component. The difference is the perspective from which you view the person - outside or from their eyes. In either case, you could decide to stop and help the homeless person or step over them. Neither sympathy nor empathy guarantees a certain response. Even with the more detached interpretation you use of empathy, just a cognitive reaction, having seen the homeless person's perspective, you may be more likely to help them than just feeling sorry for them (sympathy). I don't think we can judge the psychological state from the following action alone.
What I am saying is that you may not realize that this is how ENFPs can be perceived. In crying on my behalf, I see that as self centered. I think by her telling me how much she's suffering on my behalf, she feels that she is telling me that she is supporting me and we are somehow close or something. I see it as annoying and uncomfortable.Honestly, I don't see people around me, ENFP or not, do that. It's bad form in a friendship, don't you think? Instead of providing support, you end up needing it? Regardless of type, isn't this unhealthy?
It's not about labeling each type example as a wayward person but in essence questioning whether we can fairly extrapolate from the example to a type. In this case, it seems very self-centered. That's not even real sympathy. We are at least known for that as a type. It seems to contradict that basic essence - how can one feel for someone else - deeply, compassionately and yet not prioritize their pain one's own sympathetic pangs? Seems rather counter-intuitive to the characteristics we associate with the type.![]()
What I am saying is that you may not realize that this is how ENFPs can be perceived. In crying on my behalf, I see that as self centered. I think by her telling me how much she's suffering on my behalf, she feels that she is telling me that she is supporting me and we are somehow close or something. I see it as annoying and uncomfortable.
The omnipotent feeling... the feeling that if I just work a little harder, put in one more hour, I will have won this particular thing. I am convinced that I can never fail at anything I attempt. And truthfully, I never do fail because once I get motivated to actually do something, I don't stop until I have conquered it. And unfortunately, there are a lot of things that are not in my best interest to continue after a certain point but giving up would mean failure. So I persevere and win but am left feeling empty and drained because it's winning for the sake of winning and I hate the thing that I've won. Usually for me, it's just to prove a point to myself that I can do it.
So pushiness, but not applied to people's emotions, I guess.