invisible
On Holiday
- MBTI
- none
I'm making this thread with a special interest in asking about INFJ experience, but of course other types are also very welcome to respond. I think that other types should also feel free to comment on their perceptions of the abilities of INFJ type individuals to engage with alternative perspectives (or these abilities as they relate to any other type for that matter): but of course please, when commenting on your perceptions about others, be gentle and kind. PAX!
How good are you at engaging with alternative perspectives?
Here are a few questions to think about with regards to this (but do not necessarily feel compelled to answer each of them in turn):
Is it easy for you to think about things that other people say, that may be in contrast to your preexisting conceptions, and that you may not have thought of?
How much effort does it require for you to fully engage with perspectives that conflict with your own? Is it easy, or do you need to make a special effort?
Do you get upset when someone expresses disagreement with you? (I do.) Why do you get upset? Is it because you dislike conflict, or you are sensitive to criticism, or for some other reason?
What are your listening "practices"? How do you perform the act of listening? Is listening a skill that you have developed, or that you continue to develop, or maybe it is an ability that is inherent to you? Do you actively attempt to improve the ways you listen to others, and truly hearing and taking on board what they have to say? Or do you consider listening to be a skill that you have mastered for all practical purposes? (It is OK to have mastered listening, just as it is OK to have not yet mastered listening.)
How much can we be sure that we understand the meaning of statements that other people make to the people who make those statements? How far do you go out of your way to understand the meaning of a statement that another person made as it was experienced by or was intended by that person?
How good are you at engaging with alternative perspectives?
Here are a few questions to think about with regards to this (but do not necessarily feel compelled to answer each of them in turn):
Is it easy for you to think about things that other people say, that may be in contrast to your preexisting conceptions, and that you may not have thought of?
How much effort does it require for you to fully engage with perspectives that conflict with your own? Is it easy, or do you need to make a special effort?
Do you get upset when someone expresses disagreement with you? (I do.) Why do you get upset? Is it because you dislike conflict, or you are sensitive to criticism, or for some other reason?
What are your listening "practices"? How do you perform the act of listening? Is listening a skill that you have developed, or that you continue to develop, or maybe it is an ability that is inherent to you? Do you actively attempt to improve the ways you listen to others, and truly hearing and taking on board what they have to say? Or do you consider listening to be a skill that you have mastered for all practical purposes? (It is OK to have mastered listening, just as it is OK to have not yet mastered listening.)
How much can we be sure that we understand the meaning of statements that other people make to the people who make those statements? How far do you go out of your way to understand the meaning of a statement that another person made as it was experienced by or was intended by that person?
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