Z Buck McFate
Pepperidge Farm remembers.
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2009
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I do trust that you are not including me in the highlighted, as I said nothing of the sort. I would not claim it is irrational, merely something I am not good at. In fact, I asked how you do it, as in: if it is in fact a rational process, it can be explained, and learned, even perhaps by an INTJ.
Well, I did have that impression from you. It's not so much what you've said in this thread so much as comments you've previously made, rather consistently, when topic of this nature comes up. An important difference may be context; right now we are speaking primarily in the abstract, whereas my impression was formed while discussing specific incidences. I can't provide examples because (1) it's against the rules to quote private feedback threads, and (2) the reason why it's against the rules to quote private feedback threads.
But okay, noted.
How do you know that you are correct in your assessment here?
I don't. But I can roughly estimate the probability based on a lifetime of perceiving such things, routinely bouncing the perception off of others to test it's accuracy and taking that batting average into account, and just plain ol' repeatability to see if a thing consistently seems to be the case. <- Most of that isn't even consciously done though. It's instinctively done, and confidence in assessments is usually instinctively formed as well.
It also helps to check my own 'need' to be right about it, which is important to consciously do. (e.g. Is my assessment a narrative I'm telling myself to soothe my own discomfort in some way? Do I simply feel a need to be right about it as some abstract need to feel Right? etc.) If I can honestly claim (to myself - this isn't about convincing others) that I'm not feeling a 'need' to be right, that helps rule out the kind of white noise that casts a shade of doubt as well.
How often do you turn out to be wrong?
I don't actually know how to quantify this. In fact, I'll go so far as to say that I think the human mind tends to err when it attempts to quantify it (either a person distorts in the direction of being too hard on themselves and thinking they're wrong more often than they really are, or they can't handle seeing/accepting they are wrong as often as they truly are). Mostly because it isn't even a conscious process.
I can say that it is definitely a priority to me to be able to hear it when I am wrong. Having that as too much of a major priority when I was younger though led me to stifle my own gut instinct in ways that came back and bit me on the ass, too many times to rely on openness as a default anymore. My own gut instinct wouldn't permit me, even if I tried forcing it on myself for ego identity ("openness") purposes. I'm probably (hopefully) on the tail end of a backlash of that though, in which anyone trying to pressure me to ignore my gut instinct resulted in my gut instinct wanting to set them on fire. I've taken to cultivating a middle road in which it's important to accept that it's okay to be wrong *and* to believe in myself when I don't think that I am. This helps me to pay attention and be more accepting in the moment of the times when I am wrong - which ultimately enables me to be wrong less often?
So I don't know. I guess, I'm wrong as often as I need to be to learn how not to be wrong?

What are usually the consequences when you are wrong?
This may be because I'm e5, but there's little more annoying to me than someone who thinks they can 'read' me or someone who inserts meaning 'between the lines' and is horribly wrong about what they're inserting. I have an exceptionally short fuse about it. I mean, actually, it's not when people are horribly wrong about what they're inserting so much as if I get dragged into any exhausting melodrama because of it. If someone is horribly wrong and they ask me about it, and the whole thing passes without incident, then it's not really a problem. But oftentimes people react strongly to their own incorrect assumptions, and for a lot of people - once that horse is out of the gate, there's no putting him back in. And so, the biggest consequence of when I'm wrong is knowing I imposed that kind of loathsome hell on another person.
Of course, that's about internal consequences and I'm not sure if that's what you mean.
Another way to answer the question is: superfluous, senseless melodrama. Offending people, for all sorts of various reasons. Brimstone, Hellfire and whatnot. I guess I'm not entirely sure what you're asking here. That or I've already run out of steam thinking about this.