cascadeco
New member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2007
- Messages
- 9,080
- MBTI Type
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- 9w1
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
I had imaginary friends, hordes of them. Some of them lived in a tree in front of my house. I brought them to school with me and got them to fill out the boring math worksheets. I wanted them to do the work while I stared out the window. Unfortunately, it didn't work because they were as bored with the math worksheets as I was. The imaginary friends left me when the tree was cut down.
I was reminded of the imaginary friends when I read "To Kill a Mockingbird," by Harper Lee. When Jem and Scout found the pennies and gum in the knothole in the tree, I thought of those imaginary friends who amused me when I was lonely and didn't have very many real friends.
You've just provided a great illustration as to why I don't think you can take an isolated stereotypical behavior -- imaginary friends -- and attribute it to N's vs. S's, or use one behavioral thing as a basis of your entire self-typing process (I'm not saying anyone DOES that or is recommending that in this thread, though!). You, as an ISFP, had imaginary friends as a child. I, as an INFJ, did not.
It might be more true that N's or NF's as a*grouping* are more likely to have imaginary friends than S's or SP's (I wouldn't know as to the actuality of that...but that's what 'They' say), but that trend does not help the *individual* decide N/S, based on one trait/behavior.
But looking at many, many traits, and seeing what your overall trend as a person is...can then point towards N vs. S. It's more of a holistic approach, though. Backing up and looking at yourself through a big lens and noticing patterns and overall tendencies in who you are and how you process things.