EvenStrongerNow
Diamond Member
It's possible that stress responses take people from their core personality type into another one. Perhaps you have developed your thinking side as a defense after trauma, but you were originally a feeler?
INFJ's are notorious for seeing the layers.
It is my opinion that you do see the layers and you are extremely intelligent. You crave those kinds of conversations and desire to be around friends who challenge you intellectually. Also, it is important to remember that being able to be vulnerable is a sign of emotional intelligence, which you already have (I know that by the way you aren't afraid to allow different parts of yourself to come out even though they may contradict, but you are aware of that too because the bigger picture is that those parts working together produces a person making absolute perfect sense. That is balance and harmony), but because you were hurt, being vulnerable meant not surviving.
Your ultra developed thinking side, because of trauma, brings to the front your experience of being vulnerable after trauma, also means being hurt sometimes because others aren't as emotionally intelligent.
The issue in making friends seems to be a mask for being impatient with the time it takes to analyze the emotional intelligence of another person because that can also mean getting hurt again because you crave the people who will accept all parts of you without making it a "thing" to suit their own agenda. Scrambling through "social anxiety" is another mask for denying who you really are and wanting to be accepted. You mean what you say and you say what you mean. It is important for you to be understood as a whole--not just in parts.
Stop trying to be someone different to fit in. I like who you are.
Perhaps I am projecting again. The brain is so fascinating, isn't it? ;)
INFJ's are notorious for seeing the layers.
It is my opinion that you do see the layers and you are extremely intelligent. You crave those kinds of conversations and desire to be around friends who challenge you intellectually. Also, it is important to remember that being able to be vulnerable is a sign of emotional intelligence, which you already have (I know that by the way you aren't afraid to allow different parts of yourself to come out even though they may contradict, but you are aware of that too because the bigger picture is that those parts working together produces a person making absolute perfect sense. That is balance and harmony), but because you were hurt, being vulnerable meant not surviving.
Your ultra developed thinking side, because of trauma, brings to the front your experience of being vulnerable after trauma, also means being hurt sometimes because others aren't as emotionally intelligent.
The issue in making friends seems to be a mask for being impatient with the time it takes to analyze the emotional intelligence of another person because that can also mean getting hurt again because you crave the people who will accept all parts of you without making it a "thing" to suit their own agenda. Scrambling through "social anxiety" is another mask for denying who you really are and wanting to be accepted. You mean what you say and you say what you mean. It is important for you to be understood as a whole--not just in parts.
Stop trying to be someone different to fit in. I like who you are.
Perhaps I am projecting again. The brain is so fascinating, isn't it? ;)