Atomic Fiend
New member
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2007
- Messages
- 7,275
I believe jeffster would be the best medicine for BA. And I'm not even kidding, I'm deadly serious.
You're welcome!
BTW, I've read several of your other posts/threads and they also have an INFJ vibe to them. I hesitiate to recommend yet more reading material for your poor overloaded brain at present, but the best published authority on the Inferior Function is Naomi Quenk:
Amazon.com: Was That Really Me?: How Everyday Stress Brings Out Our Hidden Personality: Naomi L. Quenk: Books
Her description of inferior Se in INFJs and INTJs was so accurate for me that it was the final piece of the puzzle in determing my own type for sure.
Highly recommended, but please take a break first!!![]()
The more time you spend focused on others, the less time you have to be self-obsessed.
A good post.This won't be news to many of you...I am obsessed with figuring out my type. And the word 'obsessed' isn't to be taken lightly.
I spend every free moment (truly) trying to figure out my type. I drove 30 miles yesterday to purchase 'Gifts Differing' and 'Personality Type: An Owner's Manual'. I do as little work as possible at my jobs, instead endlessly browsing the same sites I've explored before, but each time following some new idea (that surely, this time, will unlock the answer!). This weekend, like the last and the one before it, have been spent laying in bed reading 'Understanding Yourself and Others' or enneagram books, hardly getting up but for the necessities.
I just keep going in circles and circles.
And this isn't the only subject with which I do this. I am also obsessed with the 'Color Me Beautiful' color-coordinated dressing system. My mom will no longer go shopping with me because I hold every piece of clothing to my hair or skin to see if it is congruent. I would spend the daylight hours of my weekend time not with my husband but outside trying to capture my skin's 'undertone' in the natural light so that I could determine whether I am a 'warm' or 'cool'. (It's amazing that I want so desperately to match colors perfectly, yet I while doing so, my room continues to look like this.)
The problem is, with both of these obsessions, I am apparently ill-equipped at utilizing the systems. One day I will determine with absolute certainly that I am such and such type or that I am a 'warm'. The next day, I 'see' with absolute clarity that I am wrong! I will purchase 'warm-colored clothing' then take the items back because I realize I was wrong. Every cycle includes a 'Eureka' moment followed by disillusion followed by a 'Eureka' moment and on and on.
For whatever reason, I cannot recognize these things on my own. I don't know what's wrong with me. And the more I realize I cannot recognize them, the more I want to re-read the rules of the system and try again! I just know I can do it!
The strange thing is, even in my posting of this, I have faith that the 'answer' is in my obsessions themselves! That the pairing of my tertiary and inferior are responsible for this unhealthy loop.
I'm at the point where I feel the only thing that will help me is to quit these obsessions cold-turkey, but I fear that unless I understand the functions at work, I will do the same thing with something else (previously I was obsessed with finding the 'perfect' career, which ultimately brought me to MBTI which which has obviously gotten me nowhere).
I'm not sure what I even expect anyone to say...I'm just lost at the moment.
Evan, whilst I understand your position and even share something of the same dilemma, being an INFJ who has developed a powerful Ti function (I am a scientist and have to use Ti frequently in my work) I have to say that my experience of MBTI is entirely different from yourself.
Maybe it's because I'm more interested in the Jungian basis behind the theory than the later simplifications, but I find that the more I explore Type, the more I discover. Even though I use multiple alternate models, including NLP and the Enneagram, I continually return to Jungian Type as a powerful, versatile and even practical tool for understanding both myself and other people.
I think, perhaps, that we agree that it is easy to be overwhelmed or confused by the wealth of misleading information on the subject. If you are still interested in exploring Jungian type to a deeper level, it is best to suspend any preconceptions, grab onto an idea that seems appealing opr compelling to you and then see where it takes you. Since you have Ni-dominant, this approach should feel natural to you and may take you in some surprising directions!
Agreed! =) Great point.MBTI is close to completely worthless and is culpable for the problems people have determining their type. It is simplistic and misses the point. (Is concerned not with the unconscious dispositions of the persons but the crude behaviors they manifest. )
Jungian typology however, is indeed of great service to philosophy of psychology.
Edit: Seriously, though, I do think it helps some people a lot. But those same people are at risk for forgetting that it's a simplification and viewing it as some deeper truth.
I haven't read this entire thread yet but I have to comment. I have been here since Nov. 2007 and still don't know my type yet. The only thing that is definite is that I'm a Thinking-Sensor. I get so frusterated because when I use a book like Do What You Are (which is what I started with), which is based on the dictomies, I end up with one thing, but when I go by the cognitive processes, I end up with another. Bottom line for me is that I am happiest when I act SJ, but my independance, and suspicion of authority, etc. points more to SP. ANyhow, I keep going back and forth...I go in phases where I feel that I HAVE to know... Lately I've been wondering if all my confusion is because I'm Te, Si, Ne, with really well-developed Ne....?? This is what my hubby insists I am... and I see it also. Perhaps you have developed your secondary or tertiary and it's messing up the test results? Have you asked anyone close to you to do a test on you? Might be insightful - some of us are not always accurate in describing ourselves.