One is the deciding factor to give in to the other. If it wasn't for "fuck it", going with the flow wouldn't be possible.lol
Hmh, "fuck it" had it considered there for a moment while "go with the flow" is more economic with the energy spent. xD
One is the deciding factor to give in to the other. If it wasn't for "fuck it", going with the flow wouldn't be possible.lol
Hmh, "fuck it" had it considered there for a moment while "go with the flow" is more economic with the energy spent. xD
One is the deciding factor to give in to the other. If it wasn't for "fuck it", going with the flow wouldn't be possible.
I have no idea, but I like ityeah go with the flow in my world does it once and is done with it, but sounds like that is your fuck it. ok
A way, why not. Spiritual way, eeeeh... The first review I read confirmed what I thought. Put it on a poster - sells better
Well apparently I'm an infp lolWow @slant that's one of the better comparisons I've heard of ENFJ vs INFJ I've read. Yeah, it's pretty accurate too.
Lol
I did wonder... 'with the group courage' just sounds like 'can be easily peer-pressured into doing dumb shit'.
Funnily enough, though, I reckon that on battlefields, both most of the individually valorous and individually cowardly will be Fi-users. They have a bit of a 'fuck it' mentality in both directions.
Nah, that's just shadow stuff. When Ne acts up, we don't care and we go joy berserkFe Courage: "I didn't want to be in this war, but I'm going to die anyway - so Fuck It, I'll just fight and see what happens, yeeeehaaww!"
NiFe be "crazy~brave" sometimes
I think this is more like it.
Also, there's a problem here in that true courage (of the 'go against the group' type) is rare. In the example I have in mind in my own life, it was about 1 in 40. However, the most common types (ISTJ, ESTJ and ENFP) are all Fi-users, though ESTJs have it as their inferior.
How do you know it wasn't legitimate? That sounds like some core INFP beliefs ..I have an interesting case of what I see as “Fi cowardice” in mind, though it might be controversial.
One of my family members avoided military conscription for WWII by getting a fake certificate from a friend of his who was a doctor. That family member was INFP and justified his action—at least that’s how it appeared to me—as motivated by a distrust of nationalism and the State in general. However, from a look at his life it’s clear that he was a cowardly man, and that the main cause behind his avoiding conscription was cowardice. But he happened to find a kind of “Fi justification” for his actions which he embraced as genuine and which allowed him to look at himself in the mirror, I suppose.
In a way by doing so he rejected “the tribe”, which in this case was nothing else that the mass of men who fought and died for their country in the fight against nazism.
I'm hopeful and in some ways naive. But I'd rather be that than realistic and cynical, living in my own personal hell@slant you are amazing.
I just have to say it.
I like this perspective, but also this quote:I'm hopeful and in some ways naive. But I'd rather be that than realistic and cynical, living in my own personal hell
Mmmm
Well it sucks that I live in the objective reality where you said that, lol.Mmmm
I don't believe there's an objective reality so I can't agree
You only think you live in objective reality. That's your self created subjective realityWell it sucks that I live in the objective reality where you said that, lol.
Slanty, you're one of my favourite people here, BUT.You only think you live in objective reality. That's your self created subjective reality
That's what I love most about INTJs. I love you guys to bits, I always find you and make friends out of you. But I think it's absolutely endearing how you guys spend so much time trying to make sense out of things as if that's possible, something I gave up myself long ago. I'm not trying to be patronizing I legitimately find it adorable.Slanty, you're one of my favourite people here, BUT.
Just...
No.