OrangeAppled
Sugar Hiccup
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2009
- Messages
- 7,626
- MBTI Type
- INFP
- Enneagram
- 4w5
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
See here's my deal. There are some INFJ 4's who I bump into who are motorcycle riding gymnasts who read "great expectations" one too many times. Then there are INFJ 4's I meet who listen to sigur ros and hate motorcycles and hate leaving their houses and pretty much hate everything stated prior and are more interested in drawing pictures and talking to their cat about the sound of the rain against the glass.
One I have absolute love and adoration for, the other makes me cringe.
There is a completely different change in flavor. A great inconsistency. So I move over to INFP's. Its the same exact thing. The only system I've found that's had any competence in separating the differences for me is socionics.
However Extroverts almost never have an issue with swapping the J/P
I think there's even a website dedicated to solving the differences. If we're going by Kiersey, sure. J/P difference is easy to see. But a lot of people don't actually know what the functional definitions are online.
The only functional definitions I've ever read that have a shred of consistency or logical sense derived from their name is here: http://www.the16types.info/vbulletin/content.php/134-Lenore-Thomson-MBTI-Functions
This is because you're very focused on outward traits like taste & actions, which is typical of an SP. I notice SPs tend to like Keirsey &/or socionics a lot because they tend to categories according to observable behaviors & social roles. There is certainly some validity to that (such as what I just did to you, hehe), but then you cannot claim to be grouping by thought processes, or it's a poor way to do it if taken too literally.
Around here, Jung is sort of king because his functions define cognitive processes, not the way a person functions outwardly (although it often provides clues, yes). Any specifics he mentions are meant to illustrate more than define.
This is also why there is not a clear alignment with socionics & MBTI (based more on Jung & thinking styles than socionics). The difference is more marked with introverts because we're defined more by inner self than outer self, yet we often have a "face" that appears more like our auxiliary extroverted function. That's why J/P distinctions can be clues for type, although not rigid rules either. I would also look at J/P in terms of mentality over behavior, as much as possible.
What you quote is Lenore Thompson - good book, and you get a clear idea between INFPs & INFJs in there that is more focused on mental attitudes. However, her INFP descriptions are heavily e9, IMO. Shirley Manson is VERY ENFP in my eyes, and being a 4, she looks similar to many INFP e4s (I relate to her a lot; bias? YES). Fiona Apple is another INFP e4; more fiery, less gentle.
Anyhow, you can have two individuals who think quite differently but take the same action for different reasons, or even the same reason arrived at in a very different manner, and vice versa - two individuals who have similar styles of thinking act quite differently for the same reason or because they've arrived at different conclusions.
The thing with INFJs & INFPs is with inferior sensing, whether inferior Se or tert Si, there's an inconsistency in what individuals will be open to or inclined to pursue. INFPs tend to be more flexible, spontaneous & novelty driven (Ne), but perhaps need prodding (not taking initiative on their own - poor Je). INFJs can be more motivated to act on their own (Je stuff), but seriously confine sensory experience to what suits their inner vision; however, when something aligns they can be very into it, perhaps more engaged in it than an absent-minded INFP.
If you're dealing with e4s, then you're dealing with inner images, and some may romanticize a spontaneous, motorcycle riding image & others may not. Both types are driven to be "ideal", which means a kind of well roundedness that may begin to include more physical activity, especially with age. When I was a child, sports scared me & my defense was a disdain for them (meatheads!), but I idealized more graceful, solitary physical activities. So I liked the idea of surfing, but never followed through on it. The motorcycle thing sounds cool, but in all honesty, I know my obliviousness might make me end up in a coma. I'm not really sure about INFJs take on this, but I just know I see inconsistency in them too, and I think it's about how in control they may feel in a physical activity.
So yeah, some INFJs & INFPs may be like your latter description & some may much more cerebral. Generally, older & more developed individuals will be more open to experiences which don't jive with their inherent nature, regardless of type. And people are more than their type, so many other factors come into play when it comes to interests, behaviors, and even demeanor.
And to have such love/hate reactions to different individuals of your "opposite" type is very common. People tend to idealize or be repulsed by their anima/animus, and which reaction occurs can boil down to the individual they're dealing with. So for some INFJs to fascinate you & garner admiration but others to annoy you & inspire disdain is perfectly natural.
The dynamic I have with ESTPs as an INFP is much less extreme. It's more like benevolent indifference to a casual liking just because we're both laid-back Pe types. We'll work well together creatively as long as they don't get too greedy & I don't get too windy (oops!