Chessie
Community Member
- MBTI
- INfJ
I know most of the INFJ's have experienced this at some point.
You get drunk off of someone else's emotions. For some it might be staggering around drunk and for others it's just a bit of a buzz. Some get aroused from the emotions. I know intense feelings from others do this to me, positive or negative, so long as they aren't directed straight in my direction.
From the presence of strong emotional states in other persons you get wasted.
I'll give you an example. I had a friend over today who had just lost her place to stay and was ranting and raving. I found myself slowly starting to feel a bit loose and silly, unable to focus properly and my eyes kept slipping away from her. Thinking became very difficult. I was just a little muzzy. Inside my head, I was trying furiously to read her and get context from her psyche.
She wasn't easy to read in that state with any degree of subtlety because she kept moving. Still, a few hours later I crashed completely once she'd left. To all intents and purposes it was a hang-over. An empathic hang-over.
What experiences have you had with this?
You get drunk off of someone else's emotions. For some it might be staggering around drunk and for others it's just a bit of a buzz. Some get aroused from the emotions. I know intense feelings from others do this to me, positive or negative, so long as they aren't directed straight in my direction.
From the presence of strong emotional states in other persons you get wasted.
I'll give you an example. I had a friend over today who had just lost her place to stay and was ranting and raving. I found myself slowly starting to feel a bit loose and silly, unable to focus properly and my eyes kept slipping away from her. Thinking became very difficult. I was just a little muzzy. Inside my head, I was trying furiously to read her and get context from her psyche.
She wasn't easy to read in that state with any degree of subtlety because she kept moving. Still, a few hours later I crashed completely once she'd left. To all intents and purposes it was a hang-over. An empathic hang-over.
What experiences have you had with this?
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