INFP Personal Growth
What does Success
mean to an INFP?
INFPs are creative, sensitive souls who take
their lives very seriously. They seek harmony and authenticity in their
relationships with others. They value creativity, spirituality, and
honoring the individual self above all else. They are very tuned into
inequity and unfairness against people, and get great satisfaction from
conquering such injustices. An INFP is a perfectionist who will rarely
allow themselves to feel successful, although they will be keenly aware
of failures. INFPs also get satisfaction from being in touch with their
creativity. For the INFP, personal success depends upon the condition
of their closest relationships, the development of their creative abilities,
and the continual support of humanity by serving people in need, fighting
against injustice, or in some other way working to make the world a
better place to be.
Allowing Your INFP Strengths to Flourish
As an INFP, you have gifts that are specific
to your personality type that aren't natural strengths for other types.
By recognizing your special gifts and encouraging their growth and development,
you will more readily see your place in the world, and how you can better
use your talents to achieve your dreams.
Nearly all INFPs will recognize the following
characteristics in themselves. They should embrace and nourish these
strengths:
- Highly creative, artistic and spiritual,
they can produce wonderful works of art, music and literature. INFPs
are natural artists. They will find great satisfaction if they encourage
and develop their artistic abilities. That doesn't mean that an INFP
has to be a famous writer or painter in order to be content. Simply
the act of "creating" will be a fulfilling source of renewal and refreshment
to the INFP. An INFP should allow himself or herself some artistic
outlet, because it will add enrichment and positive energy to their
life.
- They're more spiritually aware than most
people, and are more in touch with their soul than others. Most INFPs
have strong Faith. Those that don't may feel as if they're missing
something important. An INFP should nourish their faith.
- INFPs are very aware of social injustice,
and empathize with the underdog. Their empathy for the underdog and
hyper-awareness of social injustice makes them extremely compassionate
and nurturing towards disadvantaged members of our society. INFPs
will feel most useful and fulfilled when they are fighting to help
people who have been misfortunate in our society. They may be teachers,
ministers, writers, counselors or psychologists, but they will most
likely all spend extra time trying to help people with special problems.
An INFP can find a tremendous amount of satisfaction by enacting some
kind of social change that will help the underdog.
- They're usually good listeners who genuinely
want to hear about someone's problems, and genuinely want to help
them. This makes them outstanding counselors, and good friends. An
INFP may find great satisfaction from volunteering as a counselor.
- They accept and value people as individuals,
and are strongly egalitarian. They believe that an individual has
the right to be them self, without having their attitudes and perspectives
brought under scrutiny. Accordingly, they have a great deal of tolerance
and acceptance dealing with people who might encounter negative judgment
from society in general. They can see something positive in everyone.
They believe in individuals. If they give themselves the opportunity,
an INFP can become a much-needed source of self-esteem and confidence
for people who cannot find it on their own. In this way, they can
nurture a "sick soul" back to health.
- Usually deep and intelligent, they're able
to grasp difficult concepts with relative ease. They usually do quite
well academically, and will find that educating their minds nourishes
their need to think deeply.
INFPs who have developed their Extraverted iNtuition
to the extent that they can perceive the world about them objectively
and quickly will find that they enjoy these very special gifts:
- They will have a great deal of insight into
people's characters. They will quickly and thoroughly understand where
a person is coming from by assessing their motives and feelings. These
well-developed INFP individuals make outstanding psychologists (such
as Isabel Briggs Myers herself) and counselors. They might also be
great fiction writers, because they're able to develop very complex,
real characters.
- They will quickly understand different situations,
and quickly grasp new concepts. They will find that they're able to
do anything that they put their mind to, although they may not find
it personally satisfying. Things may seem to come easily to these
INFPs. Although they're able to conquer many different kinds of tasks
and situations, these INFPs will be happiest doing something that
seems truly important to them. Although they may find that they can
achieve the "mainstream" type of success with relative ease, they
are not likely to find happiness along that path, unless they are
living their lives with authenticity and depth.
- The INFP who augments their strong, internal
value system (Introverted Feeling) with a well-developed intuitive
way of perceiving the world (Extraverted iNtuition) can be a powerful
force for social change. Their intense values and strong empathy for
the underprivileged, combined with a reliable and deeply insightful
understanding of the world that we live in, creates an individual
with the power to make a difference (such as Mother Teresa - an INFP).
Potential Problem Areas
With any gift of strength, there is an associated
weakness. Without "bad", there would be no "good". Without "difficult",
there would be no "easy". We value our strengths, but we often curse
and ignore our weaknesses. To grow as a person and get what we want
out of life, we must not only capitalize upon our strengths, but also
face our weaknesses and deal with them. That means taking a hard look
at our personality type's potential problem areas.
INFPs are rare, intelligent, creative beings
with many special gifts. I would like for the INFP to keep in mind some
of the many positive things associated with being an INFP as they read
some of this more negative material. Also remember that the weaknesses
associated with being an INFP are natural to your type. Although it
may be depressing to read about your type's weaknesses, please remember
that we offer this information to enact positive change. We want people
to grow into their own potential, and to live happy and successful lives.
Most of the weaker characteristics that are
found in INFPs are due to their dominant Feeling function overshadowing
the rest of their personality. When the dominant function of Introverted
Feeling overshadows everything else, the INFP can't use Extraverted
iNtuition to take in information in a truly objective fashion. In such
cases, an INFP may show some or all of the following weaknesses in varying
degrees:
- May be extremely sensitive to any kind of
criticism
- May perceive criticism where none was intended
- May have skewed or unrealistic ideas about
reality
- May be unable to acknowledge or hear anything
that goes against their personal ideas and opinions
- May blame their problems on other people,
seeing themselves as victims who are treated unfairly
- May have great anger, and show this anger
with rash outpourings of bad temper
- May be unaware of appropriate social behavior
- May be oblivious to their personal appearance,
or to appropriate dress
- May come across as eccentric, or perhaps
even generally strange to others, without being aware of it
- May be unable to see or understand anyone
else's point of view
- May value their own opinions and feelings
far above others
- May be unaware of how their behavior affects
others
- May be oblivious to other people's need
- May feel overwhelmed with tension and stress
when someone expresses disagreement with the INFP, or disapproval
of the INFP
- May develop strong judgments that are difficult
to unseat against people who they perceive have been oppressive or
suppressive to them
- Under great stress, may obsess about details
that are unimportant to the big picture of things
- Under stress, may obsessively brood over
a problem repeatedly
- May have unreasonable expectations of others
- May have difficulty maintaining close relationships,
due to unreasonable expectations
Explanation of Problems
Nearly all of the problematic characteristics
described above can be attributed in various degrees to the common INFP
problem of only taking in data that justifies their personal opinions.
INFPs are usually very intense and sensitive people, and feel seriously
threatened by criticism. They are likely to treat any point of view
other than their own as criticism of their own perspective. If the INFP
does not learn how to deal with this perceived criticism, the INFP will
begin to shut out the incoming information that causes them pain. This
is a natural survivalistic technique for the INFP personality. The main
driver to the INFP personality is Introverted Feeling, whose purpose
is to maintain and honor an intensely personal system of values and
morals. If an INFP's personal value system is threatened by external
influences, the INFP shuts out the threatening data in order to preserve
and honor their value system. This is totally natural, and works well
to protect the individual psyche from getting hurt. However, the INFP
who exercises this type of self-protection regularly will become more
and more unaware of other people's perspectives, and thus more and more
isolated from a real understanding of the world that they live in. They
will always find justification for their own inappropriate behaviors,
and will always find fault with the external world for problems that
they have in their lives. It will be difficult for them to maintain
close personal relationships because they will have unreasonable expectations,
and will be unable to accept blame.
Its not an uncommon tendency for the INFP to
look to the external world primarily for information that will support
their ideas and values. However, if this tendency is given free reign,
the resulting INFP personality is too self-centered to be happy or successful.
Since the INFP's dominant function to their personality is Introverted
Feeling, they must balance this with an auxiliary Extraverted iNtuitive
function. The INFP takes in information via Extraverted iNtuition. This
is also the INFP's primary way of dealing with the external world. If
the INFP uses Extraverted iNtuition only to serve the purposes of Introverted
Feeling, then the INFP is not using Extraversion effectively at all.
As a result, the INFP does not take in enough information about the
external world to have a good sense of what's going on. They see nothing
but their own perspective, and deal with the world only so far as they
need to in order to support their perspective. These individuals usually
come across as selfish and unrealistic. Depending on how serious the
problem is, they may appear to be anything from "a bit eccentric" to
"way out there". Many times other people are unable to understand or
relate to these people.
Solutions
To grow as an individual, the INFP needs to
focus on opening their perspective to include a more accurate picture
of what is really going on in the world. In order to be in a position
in which the INFP is able to perceive and consider data that is foreign
to their internal value system, the INFP needs to know that its value
system is not threatened by the new information. The INFP must consciously
tell himself/herself that an opinion that does not concede with their
own is not an indictment of their entire character.
The INFP who is concerned with personal growth
will pay close attention to their motivation for taking in information.
Do they take in information to better understand a situation or concept?
Or, do they take in information to support a personal idea or cause?
At the moment when something is perceived, is the INFP concerned with
twisting that perception to fit in with their personal values? Or is
she/he concerned with absorbing the information objectively? To achieve
a better understanding of the external world, the INFP should try to
perceive information objectively, before fitting it into their value
system. They should consciously be aware of their tendency to discard
anything that doesn't agree with their values, and work towards lessening
this tendency. They should try to see situations from other people's
perspectives, without making personal judgments about the situations
or the other people's perspectives. In general, they should work on
exercising their iNtuition in a truly Extraverted sense. In other words,
they should use iNtuition to take in information about the world around
them for the sake of understanding the world, rather than take in information
to support their own conclusions. The INFP who successfully perceives
things objectively may be quite a powerful force for positive change.
Living Happily in our World as an INFP
Some INFPs have difficulty fitting into our
society. Their problems are often a result of an unawareness of appropriate
social behavior, an unawareness of how they come across to others, or
unrealistic expectations of others. Any one of these three issues stem
from using Extraverted iNtuition in a diminished manner. An INFP who
takes in information for the sake of understanding the world around
them, rather than one who takes in information only to support their
own ideas, will have a clearer, more objective understanding of how
society values social behaviors and attitudes. He or she will also be
more aware of how they are perceived by others, and will have more realistic
expectations for others' behavior within a relationship. Such well-adjusted
INFPs will fit happily into our society.
Unless you really understand Psychological Type
and the nuances of the various personality functions, it's a difficult
task to suddenly start to use iNtuition in an Extraverted direction.
It's difficult to even understand what that means, much less to incorporate
that directive into your life. With that in mind, I am providing some
specific suggestions that may help you to begin exercising your Extraverted
iNtuition more fully:
- Take care to notice what people look like
in different social situations. Look at their hair, their skin, their
makeup (or lack thereof), their clothes, the condition of their clothes,
their shoes, their facial expressions. Don't compare others to your
own appearance, or pass judgment on their appearance, simply take
in the information.
- Think of a situation in your life in which
you weren't sure how to behave. Now try to understand how one or two
other people would see the situation. Don't compare their behavior
to your own, i.e. "she would know better than me what to do", or "why
is it so easy for her, but so hard for me". Rather, try to understand
how they would see the situation. Would it be seen as a problem, or
as an opportunity? Would it be taken seriously or lightly? Try to
determine their point of view without passing judgment or comparing
it to your own.
- When having a conversation with a friend
or relative, dedicate at least half of your time to talking about
the other person. Concentrate on really understanding where that person
is coming from with their concerns. Ask questions.
- Think of the people who are closest to you.
As you think of each person, tell yourself "this person has their
own life going on, and they are more concerned with their own life
than they are with mine." Remember that this doesn't mean that they
don't care about you. It's the natural order of things. Try to visualize
what that person is doing right now. What things are they encountering,
what thoughts are they having? Don't pass judgment, or compare their
situation to your own.
- Try to identify the personality type of everyone
that you come into contact with for any length of time.
Ten Rules to Live By to Achieve INFP
Success
- Feed Your Strengths! Encourage
your natural artistic abilities and creativity. Nourish your spirituality.
Give yourself opportunities to help the needy or underprivileged.
- Face Your Weaknesses! Realize
and accept that some traits are strengths and some are weaknesses.
Facing and dealing with your weaknesses doesn't mean that you have
to change who you are, it means that you want to be the best You possible.
By facing your weaknesses, you are honoring your true self, rather
than attacking yourself.
- Express Your Feelings. Don't
let unexpressed emotions build up inside of you. If you have strong
feelings, sort them out and express them, Don't let them build up
inside you to the point where they become unmanageable!
- Listen to Everything. Try not
to dismiss anything immediately. Let everything soak in for awhile,
then apply judgment.
- Smile at Criticism. Remember
that people will not always agree with you or understand you, even
if they value you greatly. Try to see disagreement and criticism as
an opportunity for growth. In fact, that is exactly what it is.
- Be Aware of Others. Remember
that there are 15 other personality types out there who see things
differently than you see them. Try to identify other people's types.
Try to understand their perspectives.
- Be Accountable for Yourself.
Remember that YOU have more control over your life than any other
person has.
- Be Gentle in Your Expectations.
You will always be disappointed with others if you expect too much
of them. Being disappointed with another person is the best way to
drive them away. Treat others with the same gentleness that you would
like to be treated with.
- Assume the Best. Don't distress
yourself by assuming the worst. Remember that a positive attitude
often creates positive situations.
- When in Doubt, Ask Questions!
Don't assume that the lack of feedback is the same thing as negative
feedback. If you need feedback and don't have any, ask for it.
|