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In this episode Joel and Antonia dive deep into the needs and challenges of the ENFP personality type.

In this podcast on the ENFP personality type you’ll find:

  • ENFP
  • Sometimes ENFPs don’t know what the right decision is until after they make the decision.
  • ENFP Survey
  • ENFPs struggle with decision-making.
  • Clarity comes after they are in action and it feels so inefficient to them.
  • Janus-like quality: walking contradictions
  • Joel is an ENFP
  • ENFPs can go down the road of allowing their emotions to run the show.
  • Or they get the message that their emotions can’t be trusted, so they lock down those emotions and ignore their gut.
  • Over-emotional vs. over-thinking: same root and the same solution
  • ENFPs will commit to something (roles, relationships, images, projects, jobs) then realize it isn’t right for them and they may have to hurt someone to extract themselves.
  • This is why they get the reputation of being flighty because they are afraid to commit out of fear of making the wrong decision.
  • Behavior is an emergent of how your mind is wired.
  • Car Model
  • The Driver of an ENFP is Extraverted Intuition (Ne). We’ve nicknamed it “Exploration.”
  • Ne is a learning process
  • It is all about messing with the external environment to see patterns emerge.
  • Speculative conclusions based on patterns it sees.
  • Behind the curtain thinking
  • Ne vs Ni podcast
  • ENFPs get so good at pattern recognition they see things the average person does not see.
  • Ne is very optimistic. Always looking for possibilities and potential.
  • Too many possibilities.
  • ENFPs copilot is Introverted Feeling (Fi) – “Authenticity.”
  • Authenticity is about doing what feels in alignment
  • What are the nuances of what I am feeling?
  • What is ethical for me?
  • ENFPs make their best decisions by using Authenticity
  • Behind Authenticity is the 10 yr old Extraverted Thinking (Te) – “Effectiveness”
  • What works? What gets the job done?
  • Authenticity requires embodiment before it knows what it wants, so it is easier to skip Authenticity and go to the tertiary to “get the job done.”
  • Effectiveness can lead to a lot of decisions that the ENFP doesn’t want to make but will make to be more expeditious or considerate of others.
  • Te tertiary is about getting into action.
  • Te short circuits the energetic wastefulness of Fi.
  • Society is impatient. It doesn’t want to wait for the ENFP to find clarity.
  • When the ENFP makes too many quick decisions, they end up committing to something that isn’t right for them.
  • If one of their values is commitment, they won’t go back on their decision. They sit in misery to honor their commitment.
  • Or they commit to nothing out of fear of being trapped
  • Behind the driver is the inferior function (3 yr old) Introverted Sensing – “Memory.”
  • Memory is about precedence. Status quo.
  • Memory is a blind spot for ENFPs and can hijack their life
  • When they feel stuck, without options, depressed, trapped – it is a sign the ENFP is in that memory process.
  • It can feel like life is being choked out of them, and it is never going to get better.
  • Can show up in times of illness.
  • ENFPs are already so aware of their body interactions due to Introverted Feeling that illness can seem overwhelming.
  • Acknowledge that you aren’t stuck. It isn’t real. It is just a story. Time to get back into your Driver of Extraverted Intuition.
  • Introverted Feeling is the solution to a lot of these problems.
  • ENFPs need to slow waaaaay down.
  • ENFPs are accustomed to moving fast, but they have to approach decisions from a very slow, internal viewpoint.
  • Recognize that Authenticity can be fickle.
  • Keep context in a way that supports Introverted Feeling.
  • The fussy artist lives in Fi – if the conditions aren’t right the Fi can’t get something done, but the ENFP wants to get something done due to their tertiary Te, so they jump into action.
  • Allow yourself to be fussy
  • For an ENFP their highest leverage point is what they are saying NO to.
  • That way they aren’t overwhelmed by the things they have committed but aren’t right for them.
  • Opportunities may pass you by. That’s okay.
  • You begin to realize that a lot of opportunities you were chasing weren’t in alignment anyway.
  • You surround yourself with satisfying relationships and opportunities.
  • Every personality type gives something to the social ecosystem that no other type can provide.
  • ENFPs bring embodiment: they have to embody something fully to grasp it and bring it to others.
  • Like a tuning fork sending out vibrations to others to make others feel optimistic.
  • ENFPs see others at their best.
  • People seek out ENFPs because they love how they feel around them.
  • Michael Moore is an ENFP who performs the things he is convicted about.
  • ENFPs love being coaches, directors, performers, etc.
  • Another challenge ENFPs have is the tendency to attract emotional or social leeches.
  • The ENFP may start to learn that they can’t stay present with people or someone will trap them into a vortex of social leeches.
  • Lots of reasons why people perceive ENFPs as flighty – they avoid going deep with people.
  • Infrastructure stacks over time and they don’t realize they are overwhelmed until it happens and they break down.
  • Why are you keeping your commitment? Is this a value of yours? Or are you afraid of upsetting someone?
  • ENFPs need to permit themselves to change plans if necessary.
  • The Artist’s Way by Julie Cameron
  • ENFPs find themselves surrounded by Crazymakers.
  • Fi can find any emotion in their heart or mind so if they encounter someone who is emotionally struggling the ENFP can experience what it is like being that person, so they have a lot of sympathy for them.
  • If an ENFP can find any emotion in their heart, they can find any motivation in their heart, and they are aware of the dark places we all carry within us.
  • Emotions are the seat of motivation and emotions are powerful for ENFPs.
  • ENFPs try to avoid the wrong emotions.
  • The dragon’s job is to guard the gold.
  • Being able to understand the human experience and sympathize with people in their darkest space is on the other side of facing those dragons.
  • An insecurity ENFPs expressed in the survey is the sense that they are the dumbest person in the room.
  • ENFPs are brilliant and highly intuitive, but articulation can be a challenge.
  • “I feel strongly about this; I’m not sure why but I think the awareness will come later.”
  • It feels empowering to do this because it buys the necessary time for Fi to do its job.
  • Trusting your gut is the first challenge before anyone else can trust it.
  • Emotion is deep
  • Feelings are temporary
  • Determine the difference when you are feeling it.
  • Understand that everything you do is chasing an emotion in the hopes of gaining the necessary motivation.
  • What emotion do you want to feel?
  • It isn’t about doing. It is about being and feeling.
  • What emotion is most essential for you right now? Excitement? Empowerment? Romance?
  • Make a list of how you can feel the desired emotion.
  • If you are in the middle of a fight stop to ask yourself, “What emotion do I want to feel right now?” you will begin to access emotions you want on command.

In this episode Joel and Antonia dive deep into the needs and challenges of the ENFP personality type. #ENFP #MBTI #ENFPpersonality

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94 comments

  • Rachel
    • Rachel
    • October 5, 2015 at 8:27 pm

    Really interesting, thanks for this podcast.

    My dad is an ENFP, and so much of this sounds like him. Optimism, seeing people as their best, seeing opportunities everywhere… That part at the end talking about not being able to describe why you think something until it comes together a few hours later, and being out argued by your ENTP wife—that’s EXACTLY him.

    Some of it resonates with me as an INTP as well, probably because of my fairly high Exploration. But also, I think, because my dad had such a big influence on me growing up, that it’s hard not to see the optimism, opportunities, and adventure of life, as well as the best part of the people around me.

  • ellen
    • ellen
    • December 10, 2015 at 4:20 pm

    Really like your podcast .. though just the comment about feelings verses emotions towards the end.

    I know there is lot of slippage re the words and I agree with the general advice and of course , we can all frame things how we want. However, i do prefer the words FEELING and emotion defined the other way around for quite a few reason.

    While you probably have you own system of naming and organizing the functions, obviously if wear are talking ENFP etc it is MBTI influenced. Reading various schools of MBTI and understanding the FEELING function as a rational process of valuing ( not emotional reaction) has been crucial to me, and this was how Jung originally used Feeling- .

    Therefore, I do think something gets lost when emotion and feeling are swapped around when discussing enfp etc. Many other types in my experience of more obviously ’emotional’ than people with feeling high in their stack and developed. Therefore , it seems to be sticking with FEELING as the deeper sense and emotion as the transitory is more in line with all of this and less confusing.

    Also, FEELING in quite a bit of philosophical literature relates more to trans personal states like beauty, empowerment etc. and perhaps FELT sense ( in combination with sensation). Of course it’s a vexed area of definition which is why i always like Jungs clarity on it.

    As an mature ENFP, understanding all this distinctions has been crucial and identifying the felt sense around the values ( like when you were talking about embodiment).

  • Antonia Dodge
    • Antonia Dodge
    • October 5, 2015 at 4:14 pm

    In mine I’m highly trained and infinitely patient. Like, when they finally locate where the shots came from there are empty water bottles (except for the ones filled with urine) and protein bar wrappers everywhere but no shells (cause I’m too careful to leave those behind). I fly all over the world choosing my targets using a profile of psychopathy and a proprietary algorithm based upon harm done, its reach and if there is any possibility for rehabilitation.

    It’s mostly a vigilante fantasy, but I’m pretty wussy so I end up being a sniper due to my lack of fighting prowess and string beany arms.

    A

    p.s. This is not something I’m proud of, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t spent some time there in my mind grapes. :P

  • Wulfex
    • Wulfex
    • October 5, 2015 at 3:55 pm

    OMG… Antonia and I both have sniper fantasies? I thought I was the only one picking out buildings on a bad day and plotting out all of my targets while avoiding the law and fleeing the country! It would be interesting to dissect all the types and their little fantasies like this and I wonder what differs between mine (an INFP) and Antonia’s sniper fantasy.

    Sorry, this isn’t adding to the ENFP discussion, just wanted to share.

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