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In this episode, Joel and Antonia dive deep into the needs and desires of the ISFP personality type.

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

  • ISFP – Authenticity/Sensation in the Genius system
  • Highest quality responses on the ISFP survey
  • Car Model – Cognitive Function stack which influences your personality more than anything else.
  • The driver process is Introverted Feeling (Fi), which we have nicknamed “Authenticity.”
  • Fi puts ISFPs in flow.
  • It is a decision making process, so it determines how ISFPs makes decisions.
  • “What feels right to me as a person?” “What resonates with me at the core of my being?”
  • Fi is all about internal feelings – being in touch with how experiences impact you on a subjective level.
  • Anyone who leads with Fi can see a wide spectrum of everything that makes up who they are, even the dark parts.
  • Fi can become very interested in this process of ethics and how we should be treating each other.
  • ISFPs in the survey reported they struggle with self expression. They struggle to express the stuff that is beyond language. The stuff that is pure feeling and can’t just be expressed.
  • The co-pilot is Extraverted Sensing (Se), which we have nicknamed “Sensation.”
  • Sensation is about Real time information. What is coming at you in the moment using all your senses. Kinesthetic. Within body. Grounded.
  • Fi married to Se creates amazing art – self expression in physically tangible ways.
  • “Do you feel on some level you are an artist?” Most ISFPs say yes.
  • The world loves art, but doesn’t love an artist. ISFPs experience something similar to Intuitives – the idealization of them is a lot more acceptable than the reality of them.
  • ISFPs are not here to do the efficient thing. They aren’t here to build systems everybody benefits from. They are here to create and replicate emotional experiences that we cannot access any other way than through art. And that is not efficient. So ISFPs can feel very marginalized because their art is not appreciated.
  • ISFPs 10-year-old process is Introverted Intuition (Ni), which we have nicknamed “Perspectives.”
  • If an ISFP has felt censure from the world because of their need to express themselves freely they will bypass their copilot and go to the 10 year old.
  • Fi-Ni loop. Dangerous terrain.
  • If you only spend time inside of yourself you can get to a level of idealization that cannot play out in the outside world.
  • So the outside world becomes hostile and the ISFP becomes a martyr.
  • This sense of victimization means every time they attempt to do something in the outside world they bring with them all this idealization. It has to be a certain way. It has to be perfect. The outside world has to match what they are imagining inside themselves. Which is unrealistic.
  • The struggle of wanting to have other people understand what you are feeling and never attaining that is the foundation of art. To struggle again and again to create that expression can create great art.
  • But if an ISFP is too crushed by the world they hide away from the world and create more insecurity.
  • The 3-year-old process is Extraverted Thinking (Te), which we have nicknamed “Effectiveness.”
  • Effectiveness is all about getting things done and making things happen in the outside world. We live in a culture that honors Te.
  • For ISFPs this is a blind spot. Which is a struggle in a world that honors Te.
  • Te systems remove the human component. A one size fits all approach.
  • But ISFPs find that offensive. They don’t’ like depersonalized systems. They want the individual honored.
  • Automated systems can frustrate ISFPs.
  • All of us have a tendency to skip the copilot and go to the 10 yr old. If an ISFP paints an idealized perspective of how the world should be and it doesn’t play out in the outside world they can start to retreat even more. They can become more inward focused and double down on the idealized projection of how the world should be.
  • It interrupts relationships with other people. Any time we project out an idealization of how we want the world to be that is not possible everything is going to fall short and we will always be dissatisfied.
  • The antidote is making sure the ISFP spends time in their copilot. It grounds them.
  • Idealism is not the problem. It’s how the idealism is constructed. Create idealism by checking in with reality and pursuing sensation. Then see how other people’s ideals are different.
  • Let the outside world inform your idealism in order to gain competence and self worth and bring value to the world.
  • ISFPs that are on target for a realistic ideal are unstoppable. They will do everything necessary to get to their end game. They make up for their Te blind spot by going after what they want with single minded determination.
  • ISFPs have the ability to help other people replicate emotions. It is their super power!
  • Most of us don’t have access to our emotions on that level. We can get lost in emotional overload. But art can help us process that emotion.
  • ISFPs need to ask themselves what art they bring to the world.

In this episode Joel and Antonia dive deep into the needs and desires of the ISFP personality type. #ISFP #ISFPpersonality

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30 comments

  • Hannah
    • Hannah
    • June 16, 2020 at 8:36 am

    Thank you. I’d hit a block recently with life and my art and I couldn’t figure out why that was. But everything you said was what I realised was holding me back; being trapped too much in an ideal that the real world becomes draining, but also holding myself back from creating for fear of not being able to truly articulate the intensity of what I’m feeling. What you said released a well of emotions inside of me and helped to provide new-found clarity. This was a incredibly beautiful and thoughtful podcast. Thank you so much.

  • Dasy Taylor
    • Dasy Taylor
    • September 20, 2019 at 9:05 am

    sorry, not here!

  • Dasy Taylor
    • Dasy Taylor
    • September 20, 2019 at 9:04 am

    I have a question, actually.

    What I’m struggling with is differentiating between ISFPs and INFPs, since both tend to be artistic, have procrastination issues, are deeply in touch with their dream world, and are hesitant to explore the external world. I’ve read many articles on both types, and on their different Percieving functions, but when it comes to me, I feel like I can relate to both sets of Sensing-Intuition. I’ve always tested as an INFP and never as an ISFP, but the description of ISFP resonates with me just as deeply as the other, and both types have some common tropes that I can’t relate to.
    I do pursue art in many forms, but never really considered them as self-expression, they’re just things I enjoy doing. I have a very rich internal world full of characters, stories, imaginary cultures and scenery, and my main goal is to somehow portray these elements. I’ve always preferred mixing writing dialogues and illustrating the environment and the characters, or act the scene out by myself altogether. I love to build each character’s personality up to the point where their reactions come naturally, based on their approach to life. I’ve spent a lot of time enhancing my skills in order to portray them as accurately as possible, but never with the intention of “self-expression through art”. I play the sax, I love doing sports, and I sew costumes occasionally. It all aligns with what I’ve heard of ISFPs so far. But also I feel like my Ne and Se are both strong parts of me, and the Fi-Si looping experience is way too familiar. But so is the Fi-Ni looping. Whereas the Judging processes are so easy to distinguish, tracking the Percieving ones, and decide whether they’re extraverted or introverted, has been a nightmare.
    I’d love to hear your thoughts on how to decide whether one has Ne-Si or Se-Ni.

  • Dasy Taylor
    • Dasy Taylor
    • September 20, 2019 at 9:02 am

    I have a question, actually. What I’m struggling with is differentiating between ISFPs and INFPs, since both tend to be artistic, have procrastination issues, are deeply in touch with their dream world, and are hesitant to explore the external world. I’ve read many articles on both types, and on their different Percieving functions, but when it comes to me, I feel like I can relate to both sets of Sensing-Intuition. I’ve always tested as an INFP and never as an ISFP, but the description of ISFP resonates with me just as deeply as the other, and both types have some common tropes that I can’t relate to.
    I do pursue art in many forms, but never really considered them as self-expression, they’re just things I enjoy doing. I have a very rich internal world full of characters, stories, imaginary cultures and scenery, and my main goal is to somehow portray these elements. I’ve always preferred mixing writing dialogues and illustrating the environment and the characters, or act the scene out by myself altogether. I love to build each character’s personality up to the point where their reactions come naturally, based on their approach to life. I’ve spent a lot of time enhancing my skills in order to portray them as accurately as possible, but never with the intention of “self-expression through art”. I play the sax, I love doing sports, and I sew costumes occasionally. It all aligns with what I’ve heard of ISFPs so far. But also I feel like my Ne and Se are both strong parts of me, and the Fi-Si looping experience is way too familiar. But so is the Fi-Ni looping. Whereas the Judging processes are so easy to distinguish, tracking the Percieving ones, and decide whether they’re extraverted or introverted, has been a nightmare.
    I’d love to hear your thoughts on how to decide whether one has Ne-Si or Se-Ni.

  • Antonia Dodge
    • Antonia Dodge
    • November 12, 2018 at 1:13 pm

    Awesome! I’m so glad you enrolled in Interior Design! Enjoy every second of it. :)

    A

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