greenfairy
philosopher wood nymph
- Joined
- May 25, 2012
- Messages
- 4,024
- MBTI Type
- iNfj
- Enneagram
- 6w5
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
Briefly describe moments when your inner INFJ comes out.
Cool. I or someone will do a thread about that.I'm not really sure, because I'm not an ESTP, but I've gotten a good handle on my inner ESFJ.![]()
Interesting theory, and I think that makes a lot of sense! I do however, agree with Naomi Quenk in her book about inferior functions that when we are in the grip of the inferior we can act like a poorly developed version of our functions upside down, so there is at least that incidence when we have an inner opposite type. It probably is right that more often the E/I doesn't flip. I at least feel much more like an ISTP than ESTP.Actually, they'd have more of an "inner ENFJ". All letters except E/I flip.
Reasons?
1) The tertiary is stronger than the inferior.
2) There would also appear to be a switch from dominant perceiving to dominant judging (or vice versa) which Dario Nardi's EEG research bears out to some degree, having found adult musician INFJs having a very strong ISTP (not ESTP) signature.
As for how, it'll be later in life, sometimes much later in life. Not everyone makes the transition to tertiary and inferior. Some people just stay in dominant and auxiliary.
In those cases where it does happen, it's often hard to see at first. It isn't as if an intuitive suddenly becomes a sensor or a sensor suddenly becomes intuitive. It's very gradual. For ESTPs (and ESFPs to a degree), you'll start noticing them gradually becoming more insightful. But it's weird. I see it a lot on facebook, where older Se doms post those things that they find insightful/inspiring. To me, it doesn't look that insightful, almost trite - like the kinds of thoughts I had in high school. But then I realize, "Oh, they're just STARTING to think like that," and it all makes sense. I'm very careful to not criticize them. (Yes, this sounds as condescending as hell, but it can't be helped: it's inferior Ni vs dom Ni. Contrariwise the Se doms totally defeat my inferior Se. Fair's fair.)
Speaking more generally ENFPs gradually develop ESTJ traits (kind of funny and annoying at the same time), ENTPs develop ESFJ traits (one much older ENTP I worked with was totally a mother hen, bringing food and offering it to people, even as he regularly flexed his ENTP argumentative muscles). I as an INTJ have developed ISFP traits (I dance of course, and somehow figured out Fi along the way, somewhere) - but I'm not that good at being ISFP, it's still new to me. INFJs gradually develop ISTP traits: every INFJ has an "inner bad-ass", if you think about it.
Anyway, I hope this helps!![]()
Interesting theory, and I think that makes a lot of sense! I do however, agree with Naomi Quenk in her book about inferior functions that when we are in the grip of the inferior we can act like a poorly developed version of our functions upside down, so there is at least that incidence when we have an inner opposite type. It probably is right that more often the E/I doesn't flip. I at least feel much more like an ISTP than ESTP.
For me I would share an example that I tend to push myself when I work out and think "Limitations are all in your head! Go hard or go home!" and then my body doesn't cooperate, and I have to be like, well that's only partly true. This could be ISTP too I suppose.
For a while, my inner INFJ was so strong that I thought I WAS an INFJ...taking SSRIs for 6 or 7 years crushing my libido didn't help either!
Both of my parents are xNFJs
My entire school was an INFJ Montessori set-up that emphasized a sort of social, ideological 'oneness' with eachother and the rest of the world
My best friend from 1st through 8th grade was an xNFP, so when I mimicked her NF-ness, I often became more like an INFJ.
My INFJ comes out mainly in the fact that I try to think ahead and not bite off more than I can chew when trying new things, because I tend to get irritable and destructive when I find myself in a situation that I don't think I can get out of without it resulting in some form of confrontation (like, someone getting mad at me for wanting to leave a party "too soon"). It also comes across as me stone-walling peoples' new ideas because I often lapse into Ni-Fe where I worry about how their consequences will impact other people (but I'm mostly just wanting to get them to avoid the drama.)
In other words, I'm very VERY much in touch with my inner INFJ.
I see another factor at play in your case. I'm starting to believe that Enneagram is a stronger influence on one's superficial personality than MBTI, because it describes how you instinctively react emotionally, and that's going to set the overall tone of your personality, no matter which cognitive functions are in play.
As a type 4, that's going to make you appear to be very INF, even if you're an ESTP.
Does this fit your experience?
You're quite welcome!Most definitely; and I can't thank you ENOUGH for not calling my MBTI type into question over it. I get really annoyed when people see it as 'mutually exclusive' are all like "Are you SURE you're an ESTP?" on account of the Enneagram 4 coming into play.