substitute
New member
- Joined
- May 27, 2007
- Messages
- 4,601
- MBTI Type
- ENTP
I totally set that up, wondering who'd take the bait 
you guys excel yourselves... haha
you guys excel yourselves... haha
I totally set that up, wondering who'd take the bait
you guys excel yourselves... haha
Oh pffft!
I doubt you set that up.
Anyone who claims to not have feelings, or not to be affected by them, has a birth defect of some sort. Or has learned to stifle that natural and necessary side of their health. We are born with feelings for a reason.
The feeling function is included within the sixteen personality types because it is a part of human makeup. If we are born healthy we have the capacity to feel and express our feelings. Baby's all do it. Except for the ones who have been damaged in some way. Those are the ones who are silent and appear passive and it's automatic to assume that there is something wrong with a baby which doesn't gurgle in contendedness or cry in fear or pain.
Some find theirs too difficult to manage or express and so develop the habit of overlooking them to the point that they are accustomed to denying their existence. That can be because of damage while being developed in the womb or by neglect or damage in their childhood.
Obviously some types have less need for development of feelings than other types. And some types have more need to learn feeling management and recognition than other types. But the fact remains that a healthy human is born with the need and capacity for emotion.
Why haven't you kissed Trinity yet?
The bold describes those I'm talking about.
Have you vested emotions in me?
If you guys kiss, I'm outta here to go get my camera!
Anyone who claims to not have feelings, or not to be affected by them, has a birth defect of some sort. Or has learned to stifle that natural and necessary side of their health. We are born with feelings for a reason.
The feeling function is included within the sixteen personality types because it is a part of human makeup. If we are born healthy we have the capacity to feel and express our feelings. Baby's all do it. Except for the ones who have been damaged in some way. Those are the ones who are silent and appear passive and it's automatic to assume that there is something wrong with a baby which doesn't gurgle in contendedness or cry in fear or pain.
Some find theirs too difficult to manage or express and so develop the habit of overlooking them to the point that they are accustomed to denying their existence. That can be because of damage while being developed in the womb or by neglect or damage in their childhood.
Obviously some types have less need for development of feelings than other types. And some types have more need to learn feeling management and recognition than other types. But the fact remains that a healthy human is born with the need and capacity for emotion.
I was neither neglected nor abused as a child. There was no trauma. Growing up, I was treated like an absolute princess (in case it isn't clear, I'm a woman).
So please, just stop it with this nonsense. Oh wait, you won't ... because you believe what you want to believe despite contrary evidence.
Christ. :rolli:
How come everyone who emotes differently or very little must be victim of some sort of abuse? Is it really so much of a crime that it must be excused this way?
It's not emoting differently that we're talking about.
It's the conscious rejection of feeling.
Then why must that always be prompted by abuse?
Because it's incredibly highly correlated. (Not necessarily abuse, but some sort of unmet need.) For every single person I've been close to, I can (and do, it's my obsession) come up with a logically sound system for why they emote in the fashion that they do based on their childhood, etc.
Plus, these things are basics in psychology. It's not like there's no science involved.
Unmet need? I can't think of a single person on earth that has completely met needs. So it could have come from anywhere.