dylan
Bearded Dancing King
- MBTI
- xNFP
INFPs focus their abilities inward, and unlock an infinite depth of feeling.
Weird. If I remember correctly, my J score was pretty high, and yet I know exactly what that is. As if your bellybutton was a peephole, and on the other side was the whole universe.
Either way, INFJs and INFPs are bound to feel a lot of misery as these abilities are not without consequence. [...] these abilities often drain the energy of both types, and can lead to paranoia or depression.
That's why I had to take a break from New York City. Just the sheer volume of psychic/emotional energy was beating me down.
Yes, the hardest part for me is accepting that not everyone can see multiple sides to every issue, that they can't feel the value that each side has, that they can't predict the outcome of a particular set of choices based on those differing points of view, and especially that they won't even bother to consider the merit of other points of view.
Ca-ching! Couldn't agree more. At one point my "inner circle" friends came to realize that I might actually have a good grasp of almost any situation, and they nicknamed me "the voice of reason." Hehehe...
You can't control what other people think, but you can control your own thoughts. And as long as you can accept yourself as worthy, it is no longer your problem whether or not other people do so.
Heh, I try and live by that, but it gets kind of skewed into: I know I am my own harshest critic and have unrealistically high standards for myself. So even when I feel like I am failing miserably, when external evidence and feedback say I'm doing just fine, I kind of trust in that. Tentatively.
But about feeling paranoid, feeling like people around you are feeling negatively towards you... I've come to question the exact nature of that feeling. I was with a group of people, and one of the guys was very angry, but wasn't really expressing it, I just knew he was. And it was a group activity, so I thought he was angry at me and how I was contributing. But then later, it became apparent that he was really angry at himself. So I figured I had felt the anger, but turned it towards myself. Which got me thinking that a lot of those feelings that I internalized maybe weren't even really mine at all. Like... well, lets use a party as an example. Say you're at a party, and you're feeling overwhelmed with insecurity and that you don't exactly belong, and you turn into a silent wallflower (I'm assuming you all relate to this?). Certainly there are other people there feeling insecure. Even extroverted people who can realistically bluff that they are having a great time may be feeling very insecure. So is it possible that we are picking up all their insecurity, and without thinking, internalizing it? So we're feeling like 5 times the insecurity that someone else might?
And then, to top it all off, think of how it could be a bootstrapping, self-fulfilling kind of thing. Imagine what you look like there (I am imagining what I looked like there, I have been this wallflower, believe you me), not interacting with anyone, grim look on your face. You make eye contact with someone, who themselves may be feeling insecure. I imagine that to them, you look like you are judging them. You certainly aren't showing any signs of friendliness. And then they feel more insecure, because of you. And then you feel their insecurity, but turn it towards yourself. Just feeding a cycle.
And I think, at least for me, it's easier to accept and magnify self-critical or negative feelings than positive feelings, because I'm already so inclined towards self-criticism that those kinds of feelings just seem more realistic.