Zarathustra
Let Go Of Your Team
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2009
- Messages
- 8,110
Let me know when you're done editing so I can respond.
So, you are saying I am a liar here, that I am being disingenuous? That's a perfectly serious question, because that is what you are implying.
Peacbaby said:I am not saying that people's problems are primarily emotional (although, that is quite possibly favorably arguable in and of itself).
Peacbaby said:Let's talk about the pencil sharpener again. Perhaps it makes you angry because you have an anger management problem, and abandonment issues as a child. That COULD be a relevant answer to why such a little problem makes you so damned angry. Fixing the sharpener is a short term fix but you've got bigger issues that truly need attention.
Peacbaby said:I most certainly DO NOT think that every problem is an emotional one, but I will say that MORE problems have an emotional origin than a person is generally aware of.
Peacbaby said:I hear what you are inferring. I don't think Jim's emotions were the issue - but I tried to address his emotions FIRST to more fully understand the issue. Otherwise, you INTJ's are no different than your INFJ cousins, expecting people to be mind-readers then eviscerating them when they don't guess correctly.
I also think Jim's issues are much farther-reaching than just being intractable on the forum, but again, that explanation is inappropriate here and beyond the purview of this post.
Peacbaby said:Perhaps you forget too I am at a different life stage. I am not the 20-something NFP's - I swim with my red water, come hell or high-water, and for some reason, that is how I am supposed to do this, even if it means I did have to learn to jump out of the tank too.
Peacbaby said:I am not an Ni dom, I am not wired to just rethink a problem and ta-da, emotional problem solved. Of course, I do problem-solve, and that DOES often alleviate the emotional noise. But that's a fundamentally different approach I think.
Peacebaby said:I disagree.Zarathustra said:While 20% may not want their emotions to be focused on, I'd say there's still a larger % for whom the emotion is not the real issue. They might not have a problem dealing with the emotional side (honestly, I would assume the 20% of which you speak have trouble with their emotions [probably ETJs, maybe some others]), but that doesn't mean that "dealing with that side" is really gunna fix the problem. The problem that needs to be fixed [for this next subset of people] is that the pencil sharpener needs to be fixed. Once that's done: emotional response gone. Tending to my frustration as opposed to the pencil opener is mostly a waste of time, imo. I'll probably talk with you about my frustration anyway, if you bring it up, but that's just cuz I can tell that that's how you deal with things, and I'm trying to keep things socially proper. The truth is: I just want the damn pencil sharpener fixed.
Peacbaby said:I just pulled that % out of my butt anyway, so you shouldn't focus on it like gospel.
Peacbaby said:Not wanting to pay attention to the emotional state or deeming it irrelevant is a totally different matter than having "emotional problems".
Peacbaby said:This is not exclusively an Fi - Si thing and I did not present it as such. Your inference is too specific.
Peacbaby said:Not always. It's what we have to learn to use to empower ourselves and manage well.
I don't think this at all.
Explanation will have to come later...![]()
If I can ask someone I trust how it looks to them, since I'm in the middle of the clouded water and can't see well, they can help me navigate out of it. Once I either get out, or the dye has had time to settle, then I can start thinking about where it came from, how I can keep that from happening in the same way again (or is it just some kind of environmental hazard that I need to learn to work around), what my response should be, whether or not it has a toxic effect or is really fairly benign, etc.
This is one of a number of misreads you make in this post about what you think I am implying.
All I said is that I think your tendency is to believe what you put in parentheses.
If you want to talk about visceral, emotional reactions, though, I think you're having one. I, on my side, on a scale of 1-10, 10 being the strongest emotional reaction, and 1 being no emotional reaction at all, have been sitting at a 1 this whole time.
Or perhaps I have asked for the pencil sharpener to be fixed 100 times before, and it still has not been fixed, and, at this moment, my pencil does not work, and I desperately need it to work during the next 20 seconds, or there will be significant negative consequences, and I'm stuck knowing that I've asked for this to be done 100x before and it's still not been done.
In this case, I would say I would very justifiably be frustrated with the situation.
You, however, have chosen to assume a situation where it's an emotional problem with me.
Regardless, this still does not mean that you don't overassume an emotional component.
I'm basing this off how you've dealt with me and others over the last two years.
What exactly do you disagree with?
A significant part of that was me saying how I would prefer for the issue to be dealt with, and that's awfully presumptuous of you to think that you know how I would prefer for the issue to be dealt with more than I do myself.
When I wrote it, I said to myself, "Well, it's not always unproductive. It just has a tendency to be so a lot of the time."
So, yes, here you are right.
Ok, well, what I'm saying is that often times it seems that way.
And I've noticed others independently make the same observation.
This is what you said two weeks ago!
![]()
[Highest emotional peak while writing this response: 1.5]
But, as I said before, you are going too far in projecting that other's problems are always primarily emotional.
I think you are doing this because, for you, the primary problem does tend to be emotional: Fi is dominant.
But, for others, while an emotion might be part of it, the primary problem might be rational.
Hmm. True, emotions aren't always the primary issue. However, they are often quite central to gaining the insight to the problem or at least how to deal with the person. If a problem is anything other than minor, no matter how rational it is, emotions are the languages people use to communicate it; and speaking those languages is important to understanding and solving the problem.This! I'm not denying that emotions enter into the equation, but they often aren't the primary issue for me. If I resolve the problem at hand, then the negative emotions also dissipate.
I fixed a lot of formatting above, so apologies for the edits in the post above.
Plus, I had already grabbed the car keys when Z posted his last comment "Let me know when you're done editing so I can respond."
so there Z!
[Highest emotional peak while writing this response: 1.5]
Trust?
And you do your own thinking so this second person is not a tertiary substitute. What's this "trust" then? It sounds like this person or this person's presence provides some kind of stability. They're an anchor. A port in a storm, if you will. One assumes they are not unemotional. Indeed, probably they should positively not be unemotional. But, one assumes, they fulfill this role of trustee if they present stable responses. Do they? They can be trusted to reinforce structure?
How do these structures ever change?
I swim in the red water, and listen to the radio - does that help?
All that stuff is all around me, and since I can't just jump out of the water or stop hearing the bad music, I just deal with it?
(And they are great analogies, btw.)![]()
The most important thing about other people's emotions is how they make you feel? So since you feel what they feel, the very instant you walk into the room, they must make you feel better about their feelings?
Yes. Pretty much. I would say "guide" rather than "leader," and according to how much clarity they are able to provide rather than how much authority, but I think that may just be semantics. My NT that I go to when all else fails has proven himself over many years time to be kind and just and to be able and willing to verify for me or make me see that it isn't so.WHY IS TRUSTED FRIEND TRUSTED?!
They are known to have a clearer picture? This makes sense in Te terms. Te people will, on the whole, tend to listen to another person if that person has some demonstrated authority in the current subject, or has at least the potential to be authoritative. They know their stuff so objectively one should shut their own mouth for a moment and listen up. I could see this happening with Fe too. If the other person has some demonstrated "authority"--like for example, they've heard you bitch before and have both supported and clarified, and it eased your load in a way that felt authentic--then they'll be accorded this "trust". I could see Fe types "trusting" spiritual leaders too, at least as long as those leaders didn't objectively make things worse with their teachings or their personal presentation when you met them. I could see "trust" having various degrees according to the authority the person objectively has. Is that how it works?
Something disturbing me here is the nonchalance with which you guys talk of talking through some feeling. I accept that this is your area and you're as able to know and speak clearly of these things as I am in what interests me, but there's another conceptual block going on. I acknowledge that it's a block, not a disproof. It's this: I can quite easily believe in a person's ability to describe mechanisms of the world--using models, forms, shapes, talk of causes and the way things happen or should happen. For these things, in my humble estimation, there are words. But you're talking about talking about feelings!
Feelings have mechanisms? There's forms? And causes? There are models for describing these things independent of individuals? THERE ARE MODELS THAT GENUINELY ARE DESCRIPTIVE?!
Ah, LOL. It took me a while to work out how to write all that and right now, just this minute, it comes to me that all that Ti claiming that went on earlier about how nothing is objective... an Fi type insisting that there never can be a system to feeling interaction between people, this is the same deal. DOWN WITH OBJECTIVITY! YOU CAN"T KNOW WHAT I FEEL! Fi FOR LIFE!
BUT ALL THAT ASIDE...
I said earlier that a Te type would listen to someone if that someone were authoritative. The measure of that authority would be the Te of the listener. As soon as the person with authority makes a mistake, they lose part of their position as guide or leader. It's all supposed to add up for everyone. The Te story of whatever the subject is, is supposed to be accessible, reasonable, understandable to all--independent of the speaker. As soon as the authority engages in obfuscation or rests (too heavily) on their "authority" as proof of their position, they're demoted.
There perhaps by analogy is Fe authenticity. If the story of your feeling as explained (or helped to expression) by the authority rings false then... well, I don't know. Who loses authenticity then? Or do they just lose authority?
Oh god, this is all "feelings". How can feelings have "system"?!
Regarding point 2:
A leader shouldnt loose his competence if he makes a mistake.
That might be what I was asking for. It should answer the question: What makes a statement true? If you do that, you have answered my request.