I feel safe enough to discuss Fi, mostly because i can just steamroll over anyone trying to shut me down on it. I can understand it if other Fi users don't feel so bold though...
I tend not to discuss Fi from an Fi perspective though, as the inherently artificial nature of type means I could end up being off the mark. I use Te.
To answer the OP, yes and no. My thoughts:
- When I see another threat about INFPs or Fi I wince a little. This is partly out of embarrassment and sympathy for the other types because of just how ubiquitous they are. It is also because I know they all but invite unjustified belligerent attacks on us. Like OA said, it bothers me that Fi users (INFPs in particular) are frequently treated as a joke by so many. No matter how reasonable and thought-provoking these discussions are, they will nonetheless treated as just silly, whining, emotional nonsense; despite the fact that almost all Fi discussions are nothing of the sort. In fact I almost always approach them in a measured, emotionally distanced manner and resent being written off as a hysterical woman for simply wishing to discuss an emotion based subject matter. It is even worse when I seek to defend myself and am accused of being 'too sensitive'. :rolli:
-Fi doms/aux are introspective by nature. Our personalities, demeanours and motivations deeply intrigue us and the endless threads exploring these are merely an expression of our type. I really don't see that I should be consistantly attacked for my natural inclinations. And to reiterate what someone said earlier, Fi Ne users also like to cover the same ground over and try to squeeze out some new significance from it. Again this is a type based behaviour. I often feel that many NTs in particular are unwilling to attempt to understand us on our own terms. I am so damn tolerant and accommodating to others and their differences; can't people return the favour.
- On the other hand, Fi doms/aux are inclined to be a little to precious about the function. I am fine with people here saying they find it fascinating and love it to death as long as we acknowledge that everyone feels that way about their dom and aux functions. There can be a degree of misunderstanding here, however, as Fi users often speak from a very subjective experience as a way of stimulating discussion. I think we have to be more careful in framing our responses so as not to appear to be treating our experiences as somehow special or tearing down other functions/types in order to define or bolster our own. We can get a bit carried away when given the chance to speak frankly about these things and perhaps need to be little more mindful of how we express ourselves. Granted we are not the worst offenders in this regard by any means.
I must say on the whole I feel happy with talking openly about Fi around here due to the shear numbers of us. It would be nice if I didn't have to constantly brace myself for the inevitable attacks but they don't put me off too much.
PB,
I can talk about Fi-as long as I dont use Fi as the tool of communication. As long as I use Te to discuss Fi, then I have a barrier between me and the other person. When I begin to feel Fi defensive, I step back and then try and ask ask the person why they are acting the way they are, then try and understand if there is an irreconcialable diff, a misunderstanding, or perhaps the other person just needs some downtime to cool off.
But the conflicts as of late are far, FAR more fascinating as they are not simple Fi-Fe conflicts about values.
Note that Fi/Te users assume the idea is an objective thing....the idea is not me. Thus the idea is fully open for critique.
It is projection on our part, to assume that the Fe/Ti users feel the same way about the sharing of ideas.
The conflicts actually are more about how ideas are shared, who has a right to share ideas, how social acceptance influences the sharing of the idea, and how each us responds to our ideas being critiqued. When I took my MBTI course, the topic of idea evaluation came up. The INFP, ESTJ, ISTJ and myself treated ideas as open for criticism-the assumption is that we need to find the best idea to meet the needs of the group. The ENFJ and four ISFJs agreed that if you critiqued their idea, you were critiquing them.
After watching groups of NTPs at work-they dont openly poke ideas. They are not highly questioning in public. Instead they use "we" almost exclusively, they pose critique as questions, or discuss critique of ideas one-on-one offline. They will also talk with every person before the meeting, build a consensus, so when the idea is presented in public everyone is already in agreement. Public disagreement is done VERY gently. "Have we considered this?" Almost to not call out any one person as being the originator of a bad idea. I actually had an INFJ say "A bad idea machine is a bad idea".
If at this point you very loudly question the idea, the Fe/Ti group becomes very...angry, tense...and my ENTP says it looks like that person is very selfish or self centered-as they drag the whole group out of pseudo harmony to be disruptive-by very openly questioning the idea in terms of "you".
Here at the forum, I dont think the Fe users ever mean to do this. But just like us with our defensive Fi, they have some level of Fe values involved. If we poke too long I bet it cant help but eventually pass the boundary of tolerance and result in frustration and confrontation of their part-as our innate communications mannerisms stomp all over their Fe values.
I think it may be an irresolvable issue, but the value may be in learning about this here-recognizing we will never, ever agree, then using the tool in the real world to smooth our communication skills with those we care for or interact with.
But just my thoughts and sloppy ideas, so please take whatever is of value.
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I think Fe is more well-received because it's simply easier to describe without delving into that.
I don't feel "unsafe" to discuss Fi, but I do get a sense that any discussion of Fi from actual Fi-doms (and Fi-aux) people will be belittled, mocked, and eventually suppressed, yes. The massive Fe/Fi gone awry thread was actually heartening in some ways; it was allowed to develop into honest discussion. I already see this thread being subjected to a discrediting; it will be written off as whiny & without provocation because that is easier to do than address any actual points. It's almost like people are threatened by a Fi-dom having an opinion. We're only cool as long as we passively agree & keep quiet. God forbid we have a spine. The double standard regarding this aspect with NTs annoys me (Why can't I be flippant on occasion also?). If anyone were to call them out on making emotionally laden posts, they'd get all pissy about it & deny it. I'm cool to admit I can be sensitive & emotional, but doing so just provides ammunition for others to invalidate your words. Not to mention, I don't think an emotional & sensitive response is invalid anyway; why are people so threatened by non-stoic communication? It seems to me it's because they don't handle their own passionate side well, and they assume others cannot either; their only solution is to put a damper on it. Meanwhile, the F types were getting along just fine.
I noticed that when an INTJ made a Fi thread some time ago, the discussion was validated by others, and the viewpoint from the INTJ was taken seriously (can't remember the poster name....sorry). That's frustrating. It's not that the thread was not interesting or not accurate, but it illustrates how Fi discussed by Fi-ers in a Fi way is invalidated by comparison. I wonder if we had "NT" under our avatars if our comments would be taken differently (I think so)*.
I don't even care if other non-Fi types don't want to participate, but why they have to pop their head in to do nothing more than make snarky comments in an attempt to derail the thread is beyond me. That is my observation. I don't plan on NOT talking about Fi or function theory any less than I have been or in any different way (I don't care about popularity or being a voice of dissent), but I will continue to expect my view to be disregarded by anyone who is NOT a Fi-dom or aux. It is funny how much the Fi-dom and aux people actually AGREE in these discussions though; it seems we grasp each other just fine in our communication styles (exploring feelings, tossing out ideas, comparing notes, making conjectures). I find much more similarity emerges than differences, and exploring the disagreements can be interesting when viewed through the lens of the enneagram. No one is trying to "win" or "prove" anything, which I guess is foreign to T types. It's called sharing & exploration.
*It's also interesting how that loooong Ni thread was explored in a similar vein, and no one got all pissy about it.
Personally, I always feel safe to discuss things in a fi manner. If someone questions me, I'm willing to answer. The often complimentary condescending tone doesn't bother me; i'm not out to convince anybody of anything I may hold to be true; because people are generally set in their own ways anyway.
To answer the OP, yes and no. My thoughts:
- When I see another threat about INFPs or Fi I wince a little. This is partly out of embarrassment and sympathy for the other types because of just how ubiquitous they are. It is also because I know they all but invite unjustified belligerent attacks on us. Like OA said, it bothers me that Fi users (INFPs in particular) are frequently treated as a joke by so many. No matter how reasonable and thought-provoking these discussions are, they will nonetheless treated as just silly, whining, emotional nonsense; despite the fact that almost all Fi discussions are nothing of the sort. In fact I almost always approach them in a measured, emotionally distanced manner and resent being written off as a hysterical woman for simply wishing to discuss an emotion based subject matter. It is even worse when I seek to defend myself and am accused of being 'too sensitive'. :rolli:
-Fi doms/aux are introspective by nature. Our personalities, demeanours and motivations deeply intrigue us and the endless threads exploring these are merely an expression of our type. I really don't see that I should be consistantly attacked for my natural inclinations. And to reiterate what someone said earlier, Fi Ne users also like to cover the same ground over and try to squeeze out some new significance from it. Again this is a type based behaviour. I often feel that many NTs in particular are unwilling to attempt to understand us on our own terms. I am so damn tolerant and accommodating to others and their differences; can't people return the favour.
- On the other hand, Fi doms/aux are inclined to be a little to precious about the function. I am fine with people here saying they find it fascinating and love it to death as long as we acknowledge that everyone feels that way about their dom and aux functions. There can be a degree of misunderstanding here, however, as Fi users often speak from a very subjective experience as a way of stimulating discussion. I think we have to be more careful in framing our responses so as not to appear to be treating our experiences as somehow special or tearing down other functions/types in order to define or bolster our own. We can get a bit carried away when given the chance to speak frankly about these things and perhaps need to be little more mindful of how we express ourselves. Granted we are not the worst offenders in this regard by any means.
I must say on the whole I feel happy with talking openly about Fi around here due to the shear numbers of us. It would be nice if I didn't have to constantly brace myself for the inevitable attacks but they don't put me off too much.
Hm. I posted what I did because, to me.. to put aside Fi is to put aside a good part of my personality as well. It's a major function. To me, the question is simply, do you feel safe to be yourself? And the answer is, I've never felt entirely safe to be entirely myself ever. It's not a very safe world out there, and very few people give you relief from it.
I suppose I was getting at, if people had a specific definition for Fi in terms of what they feel it is, it helps to know what they truly feel safe about or not. I'm a bit confused on if the OP wants us to feel safe talking about Fi, or talking about ourselves as Fi users. At least with a definition + response, we could see what people were trying to get at, and clearing up miscommunications is always a good thing. I think.![]()
I'll talk about Fi. But the fact that it's necessary for me to "steamroll", although I typically just give the finger and tell them to fuck off instead of actually pushing back, leads me to say that it's not "safe", since a "safe" place is a place where I wouldn't have to do that sort of thing.
Truth is, no, I don't.
I'd have to say that no, I don't really feel fully at liberty to discuss Fi from my perspective- but it has mostly been because of the dismissive reaction of a small number of other Fi-doms to my input in previous discussions. I think we Fi users need to be more careful to accept that others' experiences of Fi may differ from our own.
Considering some of the wackadoo, out in left field, crap, that has been posted on this forum. NO one has any right to complain unless it's vicious and hurtful. And I mean posted by all types.
{...}
To me, the question is simply, do you feel safe to be yourself? And the answer is, I've never felt entirely safe to be entirely myself ever. It's not a very safe world out there, and very few people give you relief from it.
Expand that Noon; do you mean it's easier for folks to understand, or easier for you to explain?
I don't think INFPs have any such tendency to do so openly IRL. I think we do it in our heads occasionally and its more in the form of arrogant pride in our skills and virtues.Thanks for that whole post Southern Kross - you have summarized your perspective and the issues very well. @bold: Do you think Fi has a tendency to undermine the experiences of others? I tend to think we are soo accepting that we expect to receive the same in return, but what's frustrating is that doesn't happen very often.
Good question. I'm not sure. I have often wondered that if INFPs were more common in the general population would we be considered less 'weird'. It seems not. Perhaps the 'weirdness' is inherent. As for protecting one another: I'm not sure that it would help. What do you think?And taking into account your next point: Due to the sheer numbers of us, why do you think we are not taken seriously? Should we be more supportive of each other, more protective of each other?
This certainly may be a factor.This thread has been most illuminating in terms of understanding how the Fi users feel.
When we were children, we learned that certain things were not accepted by others and we modified our behaviors to conform. Everybody does this and I am not sure anybody is ever really truly safe to be themselves except with those who are very close to them. It's sad but it is true.
As I was thinking about all of the Fe/Fi conflicts over time and the level of intensity in these conflicts, I have to admit not being able to fully grasp why it occurs. I wonder if it has something to do with this.
http://hubpages.com/hub/Carl-Jung-and-the-Shadow-An-Introduction
Finally, it appears to me that while Fi users are very attuned to how they feel, they don't necessarily share those feelings with others and that behavior isn't limited to the forum. Isn't that part of the issue? That is, to not feel comfortable sharing these things with others would be inherent to type?
Thanks for that whole post Southern Kross - you have summarized your perspective and the issues very well. @bold: Do you think Fi has a tendency to undermine the experiences of others? I tend to think we are soo accepting that we expect to receive the same in return, but what's frustrating is that doesn't happen very often.
I don't think INFPs have any such tendency to do so openly IRL. I think we do it in our heads occasionally and its more in the form of arrogant pride in our skills and virtues.
an unspoken sense of superiority. This is not pride in my suffering but a belief that "even though you think you're better than me, you're too stupid/uncultured/out-of-touch to realize I'm actually better than you"
The problem with Fi is that its process is inherently subjective. This subjectivity is augmented by the inclination towards the primacy of emotional intensity, represented so well by INFPs.
I can appreciate another's Fi-ness because I relate to it, albeit indirectly. Since feelings are the filter through which Fi analyses data, they become sacrosanct; a hostile criticism of feeling is considered a transgression against the feelings' originator.
The problem is then one of reduction: other types can reduce feelings to the point of the ridiculous because they do not comprehend their meanings. I can do that with Te as well, if I feel like it. But there's no point. Te could explain the rigours of space to me, but would less adept at conveying the beauty of a star.
I
It's all well and good to laugh at Fi, as long as you're willing to write off significant chunks of literature, music and art, as whimsical and indulgent.