You know I once did a presentation on MBTI?
Got a top grade just because I was passionate enough about the subject to deliver it confidently.
I am very close to being an INFP (I am slightly on the ENFP side, though just got 1% "E," so I'm roughly in the middle.) I tend to be on the sensitive side as well, so I might check out the vids.
I think I mentioned once before to you that I pegged you as an enfp instantly
you may get bordering results, but I still feel that you lean to the enfp more than the infp. I always find it so much easier to pick out NF types and even easier to whittle out the nfp's. This is why i do put so much stock in it, because it has became unbelievably easy to recognise someone's type, or round it off.
I don't put huge stock in the meyer-briggs, and at times I think it can be self-fulfilling to label oneself as a "type" -- it can make you think you will always act in a certain way and hence you act that way. It's also shitty for justifying behavior sometimes (i.e. "I can't help picking on others, it's just the way I am")
It can be. I think often it depends on the place a person is in their life, if they are depressed, defeated etc then it's natural to fall back into this "I can't change because of" position, but sometimes we reach a point in our life when we recognise that certain things are merely preferences.
Not to mention immaturity adds a lot to how a person relates to their type, not as in they immaturely use it wrong, but that as we age we start to become more balanced and more able to access the other preferences.
Also, this whole "you can change yourself".........well I'm of the opinion that first you have to see if something actually needs to be changed about you.
For example, it's easy for an introvert to judge themselves for not being as social as everyone else around them. Society really does ram home that introversion = a bad thing. That loner on the outside looking in.
But is society right to make them feel like they need to change?
What you end up with is something you can use to beat yourself up with, constantly trying to force yourself to be more like 'them' and always unhappy when it fails and you can't pin point why until you begin to believe that you are not normal.
So when I say we shouldn't be over working to change things until we have examined the need to change them, this is how I use it to understand myself.
I'm not beating myself up that I don't want to socialise that often, my friends have a better understanding and feel less offended when I choose to take some 'me time' thanks to knowing it's just a part of me and learning that i come back better with time off.