About

Name: Danika
Age: 26
Status: Fallen
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It Matters To Me.
Baby tell me where’d you ever learn to fight without sayin’ a word. Waltz back into my life like it’s all gonna be alright. Don’t you know how much it hurts? When we don’t talk, when we don’t touch, when it doesn’t feel like we’re even in love; It matters to me. When I don’t know what to say, don’t know what to do, don’t know if it really even matters to you. How can I make you see it matters to me? Baby I still don’t understand the distance between a woman and a man. So tell me how far it is and how you can love like this, ’cause I’m not sure I can. When we don’t talk, when we don’t touch, when it doesn’t feel like we’re even in love; It matters to me. When I don’t know what to say, don’t know what to do, don’t know if it really even matters to you. How can I make you see it matters to me? Oh and I don’t know what to say, don’t know what to do, don’t know if it really even matters to you. How can I make you see it matters to me? It matters to me.
Faith Hill


Test: http://www.kisa.ca/personality/
My Personality Type: INFP (“The Idealists”)

The following is pretty much the results I got in taking a personality test to discover which of the 16 personalities I am. Of course, not everything fits. But a lot of it does. If you’ve never taken such a test, I highly suggest it. You’d be surprised at what you would find out about yourself.

INFPs generally have the following traits:

  • Strong value systems
  • Warmly interested in people
  • Service-oriented, usually putting the needs of others above their own
  • Loyal and devoted to people and causes
  • Future-oriented
  • Growth-oriented; always want to be growing in a positive direction
  • Creative and inspirational
  • Flexible and laid-back, unless a ruling principle is violated
  • Sensitive and complex
  • Dislike dealing with details and routine work
  • Original and individualistic – “out of the mainstream”
  • Excellent written communication skills
  • Prefer to work alone, and may have problems working on teams
  • Value deep and authentic relationships
  • Want to be seen and appreciated for who they are

Career

The INFP is a special, sensitive individual who needs a career which is more than a job. The INFP needs to feel that everything they do in their lives is in accordance with their strongly-felt value systems, and is moving them and/or others in a positive, growth-oriented direction. They are driven to do something meaningful and purposeful with their lives. The INFP will be happiest in careers which allow them to live their daily lives in accordance with their values, and which work towards the greater good of humanity. It’s worth mentioning that nearly all of the truly great writers in the world have been INFPs.

Positive Career Choices:

  • Writers
  • Counselors / Social Workers
  • Teachers / Professors
  • Psychologists
  • Psychiatrists
  • Musicians
  • Clergy / Religious Workers

Relationships

Strengths

  • Warmly concerned and caring towards others
  • Sensitive and perceptive about what others are feeling
  • Loyal and committed – they want lifelong relationships
  • Deep capacity for love and caring
  • Driven to meet other’s needs
  • Strive for “win-win” situations
  • Nurturing, supportive and encouraging
  • Likely to recognize and appreciate other’s need for space
  • Able to express themselves well
  • Flexible and diverse
Weaknesses

  • May tend to be shy and reserved
  • Don’t like to have their “space” invaded
  • Extreme dislike of conflict
  • Extreme dislike of criticism
  • Strong need to receive praise and positive affirmation
  • May react very emotionally to stressful situations
  • Have difficulty leaving a bad relationship
  • Have difficulty scolding or punishing others
  • Tend to be reserved about expressing their feelings
  • Perfectionistic tendancies may cause them to not give themselves enough credit
  • Tendency to blame themselves for problems, and hold everything on their own shoulders
  • INFPs feels tremendous loyalty and commitment to their relationships. With the Feeling preference dominating their personality, harmony and warm feelings are central to the INFP’s being. They feel a need to be in a committed, loving relationship. If they are not involved in such a relationship, the INFP will be either actively searching for one, or creating one in their own minds.

    INFPs tendency to be idealistic and romantically-minded may cause them to fantasize frequently about a “more perfect” relationship or situation. They may also romanticize their mates into having qualities which they do not actually possess. Most INFPs have a problem with reconciling their highly idealistic and romantic views of life with the reality of their own lives, and so they are constantly somewhat unsettled with themselves and with their close personal relationships. However, the INFP’s deeply-felt, sincere love for their mates and their intense dislike of conflict keeps the INFP loyal to their relationships, in spite of their troubles achieving peace of mind.

    Unlike other types who tend to hold their mates up on a pedastal, the INFP’s tendency to do so does not really turn into a negative thing in the relationship. INFPs hold tightly to their ideals, and work hard at constantly seeing their mates up on that pedastal. The frequent INFP result is a strongly affirming, proud and affectionate attitude towards their mates which stands the test of time.

    INFPs are not naturally interested in administrative matters such as bill-paying and house-cleaning, but they can be very good at performing these tasks when they must. They can be really good money managers when they apply themselves.

    Sexually, the INFP is likely to be initially slow to open up to their mates. Once their trust has been earned, the INFP will view sexual intimacy as an opportunity for expressing their deep-seated love and affection. More than the actual sexual act, they will value giving and receiving love and sweet words. With their tendency to enjoy serving others, they may value their mates satisfaction above their own.

    One real problem area for the INFP is their intensive dislike of conflict and criticism. The INFP is quick to find a personal angle in any critical comment, whether or not anything personal was intended. They will tend to take any sort of criticism as a personal attack on their character, and will usually become irrational and emotional in such situations. This can be a real problem for INFPs who are involved with persons who have Thinking and Judging preferences. “TJ”s relate to others with a objective, decisive attitude that frequently shows an opinion on the topic of conversation. If the opinion is negative, the TJ’s attitude may be threatening to the INFP, who will tend to respond emotionally to the negativity and be vaguely but emphatically convinced that the negativity is somehow the INFP’s fault.

    For INFPs with extremely dominant Feeling preferences who have not developed their Intuitive sides sufficiently to gather good data for their decision making processes, their dislike of conflict and criticism can foretell doom and gloom for intimate relationships. These INFPs will react with extreme emotional distress to conflict situations, and will not know what to do about it. Since they will have no basis for determining what action to take, they will do whatever they can to get rid of the conflict – which frequently means lashing out irrationally at others, or using guilt manipulation to get their mates to give them the positive support that they crave. This kind of behavior does not bode well for healthy, long-term relationships. Individuals who recognize this tendency in themselves should work on their ability to take criticism objectively rather than personally. They should also try to remember that conflict situations are not always their fault, and they’re definitely not the end of the world. Conflict is a fact of life, and facing it and addressing it immediately avoids having to deal with it in the future, after it has become a much larger problem.

    INFPs are very aware of their own space, and the space of others. They value their personal space, and the freedom to do their own thing. They will cherish the mate who sees the INFP for who they are, and respects their unique style and perspectives. The INFP is not likely to be overly jealous or possessive, and is likely to respect their mate’s privacy and independence. In fact, the INFP is likely to not only respect their mate’s perspectives and goals, but to support them with loyal firmness.

    In general, INFPs are warmly affirming and loving partners who make the health of their relationships central in their lives. Although cautious in the beginning, they become firmly loyal to their committed relationships, which are likely to last a lifetime. They take their relationships very seriously, and will put forth a great deal of effort into making them work.

    Famous INFPs

      Famous INFPs:

    • Homer
    • Virgil
    • Mary, mother of Jesus
    • St. John, the beloved disciple
    • St. Luke; physician, disciple, author
    • William Shakespeare, bard of Avon
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (Evangeline)
    • A. A. Milne (Winnie the Pooh)
    • Laura Ingalls Wilder (Little House on the Prairie)
    • Helen Keller, deaf and blind author
    • Carl Rogers, reflective psychologist, counselor
    • Fred Rogers (Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood)
    • Dick Clark (American Bandstand)
    • Donna Reed, actor (It’s a Wonderful Life)
    • Jacqueline Kennedy Onasis
    • Neil Diamond, vocalist
    • Tom Brokaw, news anchor
    • James Herriot (All Creatures Great and Small)
    • Annie Dillard (Pilgrim at Tinker Creek)
    • James Taylor, vocalist
    • Julia Roberts, actor (Conspiracy Theory, Pretty Woman)
    • Scott Bakula (Quantum Leap)
    • Terri Gross (PBS’s “Fresh Air”)
    • Amy Tan (author of The Joy-Luck Club, The Kitchen God’s Wife)
    • John F. Kennedy, Jr.
    • Lisa Kudrow (“Phoebe” of Friends)
    • Fred Savage (“The Wonder Years”)
    • Fictional INFPs:

    • Anne (Anne of Green Gables)
    • Calvin (Calvin and Hobbes)
    • Deanna Troi (Star Trek – The Next Generation)
    • Wesley Crusher (Star Trek – The Next Generation)
    • Doctor Julian Bashir (Star Trek: Deep Space 9)
    • Bastian (The Neverending Story)
    • E.T.: the ExtraTerrestrial
    • Doug Funny, Doug cartoons
    • Tommy, Rug Rats cartoons
    • Rocko, Rocko’s Modern Life cartoons


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