Lady_X
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2008
- Messages
- 18,232
- MBTI Type
- ENFP
- Enneagram
- 784
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
you're right...never meant to imply otherwise...they are self appointed rights yeah. i have the right to be treated a certain way...i have the right to know certain things about someone i'm in a relationship with. ...but...as far as friends go...i would never feel i had the right to know everything about their life.true, but it's not always actual real rights or generally held rights, so much as things you personally believe are your rights or should be your rights. see the distinction?
Say for example, not having a violent crime committed against you - that's an actual, real and generally held right that nobody could reasonably dispute against.
But Fi can also perceive lots things as "inalienable rights" that are actually more to do with their personal preferences and unique individual values. These would be those times when you say things like "But I have a RIGHT to know!" in a very rhetorical way, as if to say that nobody would dispute that or see things differently, when in fact they might well do so.
What I said earlier about INFP's vs ENFP's was referring to this sort of thing, that I get a general impression that INFP's are more able to discern and be aware of when it's an actual right that's been violated, and therefore worth getting het up about and contesting, and when it's a perceived right that's been violated, one that it doesn't go without saying that everyone would automatically know is important or a value to you, and so should be addressed more cautiously and with more flexibility.
(just speculating again)
but yeah...i guess it depends on what we decide those rights are...and some people may have screwed up ideas about what they should be...which may result in poor relationships with people...not me though...i'm one of the cool ones.
