Stefon Harris and Blackout : Urbanus
Hello,
I wanted to share with you a little something that I've seen a few times but was recently formally introduced and changed by reading the following. I took an online test and have never found a more accurate depiction of how I am as a person. I feel things very deeply and don't always find it possible or important to articulate. Very, very few people have seen me for who I am. Maybe this will help? The website listed below is where I got this passage from; they have sections on romantic relationships, career options, and self-improvement. These were interesting, especially the self-improvement page because it pointed out a lot of things that I struggle with...and I learned that it's important to grow and learn from these in order to become a more balanced person.
Why now? I've been having a lot of discussions with friends recently and I don't feel I'm always able to articulate how I feel about a situation even though I feel very strongly. I don't always feel comfortable, but comfort with myself will give me the strength even if the people I am around don't make me comfortable.
http://www.personalitypage.com/INFJ.html
The Protector
As an INFJ, your primary mode of living is focused internally, where you take things in primarily via intuition. Your secondary mode is external, where you deal with things according to how you feel about them, or how they fit with your personal value system.
INFJs are gentle, caring, complex and highly intuitive individuals. Artistic and creative, they live in a world of hidden meanings and possibilities. Only one percent of the population has an INFJ Personality Type, making it the most rare of all the types.
INFJs place great importance on havings things orderly and systematic in their outer world. They put a lot of energy into identifying the best system for getting things done, and constantly define and re-define the priorities in their lives. On the other hand, INFJs operate within themselves on an intuitive basis which is entirely spontaneous. They know things intuitively, without being able to pinpoint why, and without detailed knowledge of the subject at hand. They are usually right, and they usually know it. Consequently, INFJs put a tremendous amount of faith into their instincts and intuitions. This is something of a conflict between the inner and outer worlds, and may result in the INFJ not being as organized as other Judging types tend to be. Or we may see some signs of disarray in an otherwise orderly tendency, such as a consistently messy desk.
INFJs have uncanny insight into people and situations. They get "feelings" about things and intuitively understand them. As an extreme example, some INFJs report experiences of a psychic nature, such as getting strong feelings about there being a problem with a loved one, and discovering later that they were in a car accident. This is the sort of thing that other types may scorn and scoff at, and the INFJ themself does not really understand their intuition at a level which can be verbalized. Consequently, most INFJs are protective of their inner selves, sharing only what they choose to share when they choose to share it. They are deep, complex individuals, who are quite private and typically difficult to understand. INFJs hold back part of themselves, and can be secretive.
But the INFJ is as genuinely warm as they are complex. INFJs hold a special place in the heart of people who they are close to, who are able to see their special gifts and depth of caring. INFJs are concerned for people's feelings, and try to be gentle to avoid hurting anyone. They are very sensitive to conflict, and cannot tolerate it very well. Situations which are charged with conflict may drive the normally peaceful INFJ into a state of agitation or charged anger. They may tend to internalize conflict into their bodies, and experience health problems when under a lot of stress.
Because the INFJ has such strong intuitive capabilities, they trust their own instincts above all else. This may result in an INFJ stubborness and tendency to ignore other people's opinions. They believe that they're right. On the other hand, INFJ is a perfectionist who doubts that they are living up to their full potential. INFJs are rarely at complete peace with themselves - there's always something else they should be doing to improve themselves and the world around them. They believe in constant growth, and don't often take time to revel in their accomplishments. They have strong value systems, and need to live their lives in accordance with what they feel is right. In deference to the Feeling aspect of their personalities, INFJs are in some ways gentle and easy going. Conversely, they have very high expectations of themselves, and frequently of their families. They don't believe in compromising their ideals.
INFJ is a natural nurturer; patient, devoted and protective. They make loving parents and usually have strong bonds with their offspring. They have high expectations of their children, and push them to be the best that they can be. This can sometimes manifest itself in the INFJ being hard-nosed and stubborn. But generally, children of an INFJ get devoted and sincere parental guidance, combined with deep caring.
In the workplace, the INFJ usually shows up in areas where they can be creative and somewhat independent. They have a natural affinity for art, and many excel in the sciences, where they make use of their intuition. INFJs can also be found in service-oriented professions. They are not good at dealing with minutia or very detailed tasks. The INFJ will either avoid such things, or else go to the other extreme and become enveloped in the details to the extent that they can no longer see the big picture. An INFJ who has gone the route of becoming meticulous about details may be highly critical of other individuals who are not.
The INFJ individual is gifted in ways that other types are not. Life is not necessarily easy for the INFJ, but they are capable of great depth of feeling and personal achievement.
Love,
Maria
I stumbled across this system a couple of months ago . . . my result was INTJ, and the following analysis was scary accurate.
ReplyDeleteI have to wonder, though, whether these tests becoming self-fulfilling prophecies. Now that I've taken it, I see proof of the results in my own actions all the time. Do I actually act that way orignally? Or do I assume that I will and my subconscious follows through?
Great question! I wondered that for a while too. Does it match so well because after I read it I started to act the way it said I should? Or did it merely elucidate my most ingrained attributes - the ones that I took for granted? In the end, I think (as a friend of mine said), "It's all connected." I think thoughts and their inception are such that just seeing the mutual relationship between what comes in and what goes out is important. Thoughts?
ReplyDeletePerhaps the only thing that the test really tells us is that we're the type of people who take personality tests . . .
ReplyDeleteAlthough if the results are self-fulfilling, what are the ingrained personality traits that they replace? It certainly isn't the first time someone has told me what sort of person I am -- we get those messages from people all the time (though perhaps in a less explicit format). We've been told who we are from birth by our parents. In that case, the ingrained attributes that were "overwritten" by reading the test results were no more valid than their replacements.
True. So then why do we continue to look to these personality tests. What do they give us? A sense of self perhaps? The knowledge that maybe we're not alone in feeling the way we do. Maybe, well, did you get the same result I did when you took this test? If that's so and you read the description you'd see how internally focused I/we am/are. It's a confusing place in there if one doesn't take the time to clean up a little and reflect.
ReplyDeleteI am reminded of that bit in Siddhartha after he talks to Gotama, where he realizes that he knows so little about his own self. We're looking for an instruction manual, perhaps?
ReplyDeleteMy result is a close cousin of yours; I got INTJ. I wonder what Jung got, since he came up with the system . . . his result probably affects how the system itself is constructed.
A Siddhartha discussion is in the works, I promise!