- MBTI
- INFJ again
- Enneagram
- 4w5
someone had recently posted a link to this article and I have been thinking about it:
so what the article says is that people always seem to be attracted to there counterpart, the one that possesses the qualities that we miss. And you can see this in a lot of couples where an ESTP falls in love with a ISFP, ISFP needs to be protected while ESTP seeks someone who is vulnerable because he can't be vulnerable, for example.
But when people start to explore there shadow functions and start to use them and really own them, the attraction to there counterpart faides away and they don't longer know why they where attracted to eachother, so the look for an other person, there new counterpart.
I think this is a good theory. I have seen it happen in my life. People who has fallen in love with me always seems to be searching for a strong dominant women. I never wanted to be that way but I surely come off that way probably because I had a hard time in showing my vulnerability.
I wonder that if this theory is correct, what happens when you have developed all your functions. Does it make you fall in love less often?
and would it make you search more for someone alike, someone who also has developed there functions instead of the counterpart? And it would be more like a loose companionship than a "falling in love head over heals" depending on eachother hate/love relationship?
and the person who has developed a lot of his/her functions, would (s)he become less attractive to most people because (s)he doesn't represent him/herself as someones counterpart?
[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]We long for wholeness, a greater unity that stems from meeting the Beloved, our other half. Eros, our archetypal longing, causes us to reach for that which is missing; our desire is organized around this radiant absence. And we yearn to melt into the Beloved, to find there the missing piece, and to lose ourselves in a paradise of everlasting love. Jung expressed this universal quest of the human soul in this way: "The soul cannot exist without its other side, which is always found in a 'You.' Wholeness is a combination of I and You, and these show themselves to be parts of a transcendent unity whose nature can only be grasped symbolically."[/FONT]
so what the article says is that people always seem to be attracted to there counterpart, the one that possesses the qualities that we miss. And you can see this in a lot of couples where an ESTP falls in love with a ISFP, ISFP needs to be protected while ESTP seeks someone who is vulnerable because he can't be vulnerable, for example.
But when people start to explore there shadow functions and start to use them and really own them, the attraction to there counterpart faides away and they don't longer know why they where attracted to eachother, so the look for an other person, there new counterpart.
I think this is a good theory. I have seen it happen in my life. People who has fallen in love with me always seems to be searching for a strong dominant women. I never wanted to be that way but I surely come off that way probably because I had a hard time in showing my vulnerability.
I wonder that if this theory is correct, what happens when you have developed all your functions. Does it make you fall in love less often?
and would it make you search more for someone alike, someone who also has developed there functions instead of the counterpart? And it would be more like a loose companionship than a "falling in love head over heals" depending on eachother hate/love relationship?
and the person who has developed a lot of his/her functions, would (s)he become less attractive to most people because (s)he doesn't represent him/herself as someones counterpart?