nightning
ish red no longer *sad*
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2007
- Messages
- 3,741
- MBTI Type
- INfj
Not me, the girl; a place for her to do it with out her having to feel guilty after.
*smacks head* Gotcha!
Not me, the girl; a place for her to do it with out her having to feel guilty after.
You're already sounding like the perfect man, Run! NFJs take note!
I've never personally been involved with an INFP (I have them as female friends or married male friends), but I did once spend some time eyeball-to-eyeball with one in a very odd place. He was pretty "sparkly" in that get-Pink's-attention kinda way and I couldn't put my finger on it (as I'm used to being attracted to Ts only) and finally I *knew* what it was -- he was an INFP.
We'll get you another 10ft flame. Just you stick around. NFJs have a way of drawing each other.
^No need to feel sorry about that!
Okay, this is changing the topic just a little, but it suddenly occurred to me to ask this question: have any other NFJs besides me ever been called "overdramatic"? That's one failing that some of my friends say I have, and I think it may very well be due to this 10-foot-flame thing. I'm thinking we may appear overdramatic to others who don't quite get our constant intensity and passion -- especially when it comes to the seemingly mundane or ordinary things.
Does that make any sense, or am I just rambling?
Okay, this is changing the topic just a little, but it suddenly occurred to me to ask this question: have any other NFJs besides me ever been called "overdramatic"? That's one failing that some of my friends say I have, and I think it may very well be due to this 10-foot-flame thing. I'm thinking we may appear overdramatic to others who don't quite get our constant intensity and passion -- especially when it comes to the seemingly mundane or ordinary things.
Does that make any sense, or am I just rambling?
Just so everyone knows -- this isn't strictly about an anger response. It's the whole sensation. I frequently get this fired up and combustive when encountering someone who hits all the right spots in my brain. It can be positive too. What I'd like to focus on is the authentic intensity of NFJs (if you relate to this or if you don't) and to the primal responses we seem to have to things/stimulus/situations.
Okay, this is changing the topic just a little, but it suddenly occurred to me to ask this question: have any other NFJs besides me ever been called "overdramatic"? That's one failing that some of my friends say I have, and I think it may very well be due to this 10-foot-flame thing. I'm thinking we may appear overdramatic to others who don't quite get our constant intensity and passion -- especially when it comes to the seemingly mundane or ordinary things.
Does that make any sense, or am I just rambling?
OH THAT. That feeling as if your very soul is about to either wrench it's way out of your chest or implode on itself causing a black hole?
I relate to this all the way down to a cellular level. I've been called "fireball" repeatedly through-out my life and treated like one because when I feel an emotion of catastrophic proportion coming on me, I HAVE to get it out. NOW. My nature is to catalyze and I have to do it for myself as well. I usually only have problems when the overwhelming emotion is bad.
For example, if I see on the news that some child has been raped or murdered, or some old person has been beaten to death, I have to get away from it. If I can't get away, it jams into me. I liken my non-negotiable emotional reception to being a dog in a cage with a person jabbing you with a stick. You can't bite them, you can't run away. You're stuck in it and you have to shudder through the tidal wave until it passes. I experience the suffering of the violated person as if it were happening to me, and I just can't stand it sometimes (literally, I can physically crumble under the barrage). I haven't found a way to turn off the empathy or tone it down. I simply have to avoid triggers until I can find a better way of managing it.
When people call me "dramatic" it makes me feel even more marginalized and dismissed as an attention hound. If I wanted to get attention, I'd buy a push-up bra because I sure as heaven wouldn't chose THIS. It's a nightmare.
YES. That's the one. I wonder if the Es have more trouble with being called dramatic than the Is who can at least attempt to contain it.
I've never met a "cold" INFP before, so I can't be sure. You guys *do* seem to be able to contain yourselves though.
I think calling anyone "cold" is harsh. It can only take one of two directions: 1) it's how she felt about you/why she felt she couldn't stay in the relationship (without the intention of continuing the relationship from what it sounds like) or 2) a maturity problem.
I've told a boyfriend he was cold, but he really was and I didn't drop it on his head like a bomb or treat it like is a mortal character flaw. I just couldn't handle his always being so stony and frigid with me (and I'm REALLY not the cuddly type, so DudeMan was pretty frozen...)
WHOA. Inexcusable!