Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Triggering your emotions back AKA helping with the depression

   

          I would like the start this off by thanking everyone who commented on the INFJ depression/shutdown post. Rereading the comments helps me mentally in a way I can't begin to describe beyond saying that it's good to know other people understand.  One of you asked how INFJ’s can re-trigger their emotions, and I would have made a personal response, but I think this is something I should share.



             In the INFJ depression post, I mentioned that a depression for us is generally when we completely remove all emotion for more than a month. The problem a lot of people face is that we don't know how to fix it when we've noticed it’s happened. How are you supposed to bring emotions back when you’ve accidentally (or purposefully in most of my cases) sent them away? The answer that I’ve found works best for me is to overload them again.



             I know that forcing yourself to feel emotions again isn’t easy, so the idea of overloading them (when most of the time emotions are what caused the problem in the first place) sounds dumb, but hear me out. One of the many times I was in my depressed state I ended up watching the movie Lovely Bones. At the time, watching a sad movie sounded unappetizing to say the least, but I was putting on a show to make everyone else think I was okay. However, while watching it, I did something I rarely do while in a depression or shutdown. I cried. I cried during the movie and until I got home. I don’t know if it happened because the movie made me sad or because it put my life in perspective (if anyone here has watched it, you understand). What I do know, is that I called my family, while crying, and told them I loved them.



             Of course, overloading isn't the only thing in the world that helps. I have two other methods that I actually prefer. They don't work as often, but they're less painful. The choice I go to most often is writing. Not like a diary or anything that real. Generally writing how I feel just makes things even more overwhelming. Instead, I do quick little fiction drabbles. I understand if your first thought is, I'm not a writer or something about not liking writing in general, but hear me out. INFJs are known to be empathic, but shutdowns can cut that connection off. What I've learned is that, when creating and writing for a character, it forces you to see things through someone else's eyes again. Only instead of feeling the overwhelming emotions of real people, you are creating a connection with something you can control. My general start is a character who is depressed, angry, overwhelmed, or in a generally negative situation. Then, I make their lives better, situation by situation. I introduce them to the kinds of characters I feel like I want in my life. I don't add an antagonist, or some deep emotional conflict, because the story is about making this one person's life better. Because I made this character, I have to let myself feel what they feel to guide the story. I feel better when they do. These little drabbles tend to have no real plot, flat characters, and little to no conflict unless I need another pick-me-up. The stories are bad. They are poorly written, I never go back to edit, and I would never share publicly for fear of them being ripped to pieces. However, they help restart my empathy. The stories themselves never end the depression, but they help bring me out of the shutdown so I can find the help I need.



              The second method is focused more on other people. My most recent shutdown happened because of college. It actually didn't even occur because I was stressed, everyone else around me triggered it. Finals are a horrible time for an INFJ as far as I know. Both students and teachers alike are so stressed that it becomes impossible to breathe, and being stuck with a roommate who is just as stressed out can leave nowhere to go. A shutdown is bound to happen. This is where strategy number two can help. Don't get me wrong, this isn't just for college, the theory works just about anywhere. Make other people feel better. What I do is during finals, I go to all of my classes dressed in a weird outfit. I'll wear a cow onesie, a cape from Six flags, two hats with three pairs of sunglasses, my old LARPing cloak, anything that makes people do a double take. Some people will say that I do this for the attention. I don't. I hate attention, actually, but it is worth it. These people who were stressing, therefore causing me to be overloaded, end up laughing, or smiling. They relax, even just for a moment. When I do this, I will smile at every single person I pass, and if people want pictures, I'll take them. It's socially exhausting, I won't lie, but it helps. Seeing that, even if I'm shutdown, I can make other people feel better, makes me feel better.

               


            I understand that most people are not comfortable enough to do the second choice, or you can't wear a cape to work. The part that matters here is that you are doing something that knocks yourself and others out of your usual patterns. For this to work you have to be able to see the change you're making. I'm broke, so I choose to change what I wear based on what I already own. Still, buying silly pens to give out works to. Make it something strange that they won't turn down (my attempts of giving out Oreos in the elevator failed because people don't trust food from strangers). Part of my problem with the shutdown is I know I'll feel guilty the second it's over. This removes that factor. Do something fun, out there, creative. No pranks. In a shutdown, it is hard to tell where the line is, so that is a dangerous path.


For the friend or loved one of an INFJ: 


              If you know an INFJ who you believe has shut down, it is a bit more difficult. Personally, when I shut down, I'm likely to door-slam anyone who tries to help. One more person can feel irritating and generally causes me to have a sensory overload. I know it can feel like you are walking on glass trying to help us. I can't tell you what will help everyone, but I can tell you what helps me. The number one rule here is to never tell the INFJ why you are doing this. Mentioning that we're acting weird or that we seem depressed causes us to shut down more. We become hyper-aware of what we're doing so any attempt to help will backfire. It sucks, I know. We think so to.


             My first suggestion here has a lot to do with my religion. This is not to offend anyone, and I don't want to see a single comment talking negatively about it. This helps me, and if it helps anyone get out of a depression it is a good thing. When I shut down, my pastor used to ask me to talk about how God has influenced my life. He never mentioned my depression or asked how God did anything in a positive or negative way. Generally, this leads to me talking about what my calling is. When I talk about God, and everything negative that I have survived in my life, I feel better. Like if I let whatever is overwhelming me now win, then all of my other triumphs would mean nothing.


              My brother is actually the best at cheering me up. He is my polar opposite in just about every way, and I think that helps some. Understand that he is not physical, he does not like hugging, he does not express affection. When he sees my upset, he takes me into a room away from everyone else, locks the door so they don't bother us and cuddles. He'll play stupid songs and sing off-key. He'll turn on movies we both hate so we can make fun of them. The entire time he is visibly uncomfortable, but when I tell him he doesn't have to, he'll cover my face with a pillow. When he does it, sometimes I end up actually crying. He doesn't mention that I'm crying, doesn't wipe my eyes, just keeps going. The actions themselves aren't really what's important. If anyone else did any of these things, I'd be waiting for a reason to politely leave. It's also not just because he is my brother, because it gives me a headache when the rest of my family tries. This works because of how hard he's trying. Because he's doing things he knows I like, even if he hates them, and won't stop even when I tell him he can leave. It works because of how genuine the want for me to feel better is. He'll do things like that until I'm in tears, and will keep doing it a good week after my shutdown has ended, just to make sure. My point here, is do something that will shock them. Something that you would only do because you care so deeply. We can feel that, even when we're numb. I don't know about other INFJ's but when I cry, I don't want that to become the focus. Do what my brother does, just keep going.


           Another tactic used is therapy shopping. Not online, but physically going to get the thing. Now if you're thinking, this just works for girls, listen close...guys want things too. I personally never go therapy shopping for clothes, I get food and video games. I also never do it myself, someone has to take me or it won't happen. Try taking them out to their favorite restaurant that they never visit. Take them to buy fake mustaches. Get them out and remind them that it can be fun. This method is not cost-efficient, I get that, but it can still help.


        I am sure you read my tip to my fellow INFJ's about doing something weird. This works the other way too. Something that is completely left field can shock us into waking up. Walking in to see someone in a cow onesie with a cape just restarts the system. Do something with a shock factor. I can't give too many exact examples, because I don't know you or them. You know what would get them to just start laughing if they walked in and saw it. This is not a long-term solution, but it temporarily stops the shutdown so you can step in and keep your INFJ upbeat. 



             Here is a little secret I have learned over time from my own life, and reading other INFJ blogs. When an INFJ is depressed/shut down, do not talk about their emotions. Don't dig, don't ask what's wrong. Just fix it. After we feel better, we will be willing to talk about it. During the depression, people asking just hurts more. We want to tell you what's wrong. We want you to understand, but that is the INFJ paradox. No matter what we do, we do not feel like we can get people to understand, or we have a feeling with no way to tell you the cause. It's frustrating, and devastating, and makes us feel isolated. Even if you understand, which you probably do, we're feeling the emotion so deeply that trying to explain it causes a stronger shutdown. I'm a little conflicted writing this honestly. Because deep inside a part of me is saying that INFJ's want to talk about what's wrong because I always want to tell people why I'm so numb. The truth here is, when we try to explain, it feels like we're making mountains out of molehills. 


      An example of this happened just this year. I failed a class, my first time ever failing a class. It felt like my world was ending, and I was suffocating. When I told my friends, they said, "Everyone fails a class." It was supposed to cheer me up, but instead I shut down and didn't talk to them about it again. Because they were right, of course. It was just a class. I could retake it. However, INFJ's are feelers, not thinkers. Knowing I could retake it didn't stop me from feeling like I had failed everyone who counted on me to get through college. I also felt like I couldn't talk to my family about it because my grandma was diagnosed with cancer. How do I tell them I'm falling into this emotional abyss over a grade when cancer is a factor in our lives? I wanted to tell people that I was shutting down, but how could I? When my mom asked what was wrong, I said I was fine and just a little upset and sunk further down.


      You can be well-meaning. You can plan to be there and encourage them, but INFJ's feel like their problems are nothing compared to everyone else’s and it makes it impossible to talk about. It's a flaw of ours and can frustrate the people that care about it. That is why my suggestion is to just do. My dad got me out of that shutdown by just taking me to get frozen yogurt and talking nonstop about Overwatch. I don't even play Overwatch. But it was a reminder that, even with everything going wrong, we can enjoy the little things. I really hope this helps. INFJ's if your friend is trying to take you out when you don't want to because you're shut down, humor them.

           









          Again, everything I write is from my own experiences. I don't have all of the scientific research and facts that a lot of other INFJ bloggers do. However, I would give this advice to most people. I have been on the deep end of a depression, I have been hospitalized for an attempt, and never want anyone to ever go through that. I never want to fall that low again either. I am not a professional by any means. If you feel that your prevention has escalated to a specific point, and you will know exactly what I mean when it happens, go here https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/.  I don't take depression lightly and during a shutdown people may not be able to know that you need the help. Something I had to learn the hard way is all because people don't notice doesn't mean they don't care. As an INFJ, and maybe this is true for most people, I find it hard to remember that all because I'm hyperaware of what everyone else is feeling, doesn't mean that they are. People need you to vocalize, and INFJ's are bad at that. We want to keep the negative locked away and smile for everyone else. We don't want them to feel bad because then we'll feel worse. I should have added all of this in my last post, but it's here now.


Feel free to contact me for anything at my email: brokengirlsdream@gmail.com

Just make the subject INFJ or something like that. I'm not very formal when I email so I do apologize for that.



Sorry for the long post.


-Sandra, an INFJ


Monday, August 17, 2015

The infamous INFJ "door slam"

A lot of INFJ blogs mention the INFJ "door slam". I feel the need to cover this as well because the door slam seems to be the thing that most other types don't know how to react to. Please don't forget that all of this is through my personal experience, it isn't the same for everyone.

The INFJ door slam is what happens when I can't take anymore of one person; maybe they pushed my boundaries too far, or they always tried to start conflict. I don't slam my emotional door if you offended me once, if you argued twice, or even if you say you've killed someone. I get that conflict happens, and even though I shut down for a bit, I don't just slam the door. No, I only use my INFJ door slam when you've pushed the same thing multiple times.


The problem is that some people don't realize that they've crossed a line. I don't openly say, "Hey, that was offensive, please don't say/do that again". Instead I internalize what was said or done and I let it fester. With this being true, my door slam may seem to come out of nowhere with no explanation. One day we were doing fine, the next I seem more closed off. This is something I want other INFJ's to understand. No one can read our mind so we may seem like the villain to everyone watching.


My most recent door slam was one that I didn't realize I did until weeks after the fact. A friend of mine, on here I'll refer to him as Bull for the sake of simplicity, is a notorious flirt. In fact, almost any female who has spoken with Bull has ended up sleeping with him. However, Bull and I drew our lines pretty clearly. I liked him, but I have a strong rule; my first kiss will be on my wedding day (I'll cover this on my next post). He believes that you can only prove love through contact. Therefore the two of us silently agreed to go on with a sibling like relationship instead. No dating aloud.

Bull moved away some time ago now, but we kept in touch. Texting about everything and anything. One time he called me up, turned out he broke up with some girl, and he was feeling lonely. He started pushing past that "sibling" boundary that we set up. Of course I understood, but I couldn't be that for him. My heart hurt and I started crying after we hung up.

The next time he pushed the boundary further. He called me, drunk, and started using this weird guilt trip thing. How I'm the only person he could talk to, how I leaned on him when I needed help, how we acted like more than friends (which I'm not sure about. I acted with him the same way I act with everyone I consider an actual friend.), how we could be. I stopped answering his texts for a while after that. However, I went against my gut feeling (which I generally rely on) and started talking to him again.

I'm sure all of you kind of understand how that went. It was the same pattern as before, except Bull  started going into detail and I actually asked him to stop. My only actual verbal warning. Of course he didn't, and I came up with some lame brain excuse to get off the phone. 

I didn't really even realize until today that I haven't texted him back for a few weeks, maybe months. No contact, no answer, no reason, I just cut him off. Emotionally I can't handle it. I know that it's wrong, but he crossed the line too many times. He tried to push where I wouldn't go.

The closer I am to a person the harder I slam the door. With Bull, it was a pretty obvious case. However, there are people who I've shut out that don't realize I've done it. I wasn't too close with them anyway, so I can act about the same. It's the only way I can remove unneeded drama from my without a major amount of conflict.


-Sandra, an INFJ






Monday, December 1, 2014

INFJ Depression/shutdown

  

      I've referenced this once before, and will most likely do it again. This post will be explaining what I mean when I mention the "INFJ Depression" and how it differs from what depression normally is (or at least from what other people tell me depression is).



    The INFJ Depression is what I use to explain when I completely shut down. During this "depression" I actually rarely feel depressed, or sad, or anything for that matter. I run off of emotions and I know that I can go from elated to depressed in a matter of seconds. I'm used to these rapid changes in pace in my own emotions. Sometimes I can feel happy, mad, or sad for months on end. Therefore, I do not consider being sad for a long period of time being depressed. I also would not say that during the INFJ Depression, I actually have a lack of interest (though that is partly true). If someone around me is in a depression, I can feel their long-term sadness, but that doesn't make me go into a depression; it simply makes me depressed.



    To understand the INFJ depression, you must understand how INFJ's work on an emotional level. We need downtime from social interactions like most introverts do. We also need downtime from emotional stimuli. During this emotional downtime, I generally shut off my emotions. I don't feel the emotions of the people around me anymore, but I also don't feel my own. It is like being numb to everything. I often realize that during this time I often hurt the ones close to me. They don't understand my sudden coldness, or why I don't care that they failed the test last class, or why my expression stays blank and I become extremely unapproachable. However, when I'm shut down I don't care if I'm hurting them. Sometimes I end up just falling into a routine, giving out fake smiles to those around me, playing the part of the friend I normally am. In contrast to how I normally am though, the words and smile seem hollow. I'm still interested in some things, but it becomes easier to just fake emotions and fall into the monotony of life. The guilt does catch up to me when I reawaken from my shutdown though.



   The big difference between an INFJ shutdown and an INFJ Depression is the amount of time. For me, after about a month of feeling nothing I consider it a depression. However, that is just for me. Since I live in a family of mainly introverts I tend to be able to get emotionally refilled after a few days. During stressful times it may take me a few weeks to get back into the swing of feeling. A month is longer than it should take for me to be okay again. A month is just long enough for me to decide that the numb abyss I have fallen into is more comfortable than even the happy emotions I'm used to feeling. My family normally notices that I've fallen past my "shutdown" to a "depression" when I stop writing. Not because I don't want to, but because I don't have the emotions needed to write anything anymore.



  INFJ Depression is normally caused by emotional stimuli breaking past my shutdown, or when I've gone too long without time to myself so I can recharge. It also happens when I am feeling so much that I just can't feel anymore.



      A quick example of this is when a friend of mine ended up shooting himself. My emotions, the emotions of my friends, the emotions of his parents, pilled up inside me. I cried at first, but not for very long. I ended up entering my shutdown stage. As stated before, the shutdown itself is not harmful, in fact, it is needed. I entered the depression due to what happened during my shutdown. Even when I'm in my shutdown I am a perfectionist; in fact, normally I drown myself in trying to be perfect in order to shut off my emotions. Therefore, when I started getting bullied, emotionally and physically (my "boyfriend" at the time being the ring leader), I stayed in my shutdown mode and entered a depression. I never told my parents what was going on because it didn't matter, I never told my teachers, I never told my friends, I just took it. I internalized everything. This INFJ depression lasted about five months before I finally acted on it. I didn't see the point of anything if there was no reason to feel anymore.


       


     The worse part of an INFJ Depression is that even then we are master manipulators. All I had to do was act normal, paint on my face, and fake my empathy, to make everyone believe that I was okay. When I was caught frowning (which, apparently, a sign the apocalypse is coming) I would just say that I was thinking of my friend or was mentally writing a sad story. To the former, some would try and cheer me to, and I'd fake a smile for them so that they would leave me alone. To the latter, almost everyone just dropped the conversation because no one cared about some dumb story. I knew if I was acting strangely because I could read the reactions around me. During my INFJ depression, no one even knew what was going on within me.



     After long enough in an INFJ depression, I tend to actually start feeling again, just not in the physical world. I'll make a world in my mind and run away to there. A place where I can act however I want. A place where there are no problems or consequences to my actions. My happy place was the only place I would truly be okay. One of my depressions lasted me over three years and after the first I let my body fall into a pattern while my mind never left my happy place. I didn't talk much to anyone during that time, having moved to a new town and a new school I didn't trust anybody. I was afraid that if I talked to them they would destroy the peace I was finally feeling.




   When I was Seven I entered my first INFJ depression. I actually started finding ways to bring myself back to the real world and the emotions that came with it. I had 4 main coping mechanisms, only one of which was healthy (that one being provided to me by a therapist at the time). The first coping mechanism I tried was imaginary friends; they lived in my happy place so if I made them stay in the real world then I would have true friends who could make me feel happy and would never hurt me (it turns out that even imaginary friends can hurt you in the end). Sadly they couldn't make me happy all the time. The next tactic I use, while I was still seven, was cutting. It was easy to hide the marks on my thighs so that is where I targeted. The physical pain brought me back to the physical world; eventually, though, the pain stopped being enough. In fact, now I end up laughing when in pain (my parents are positive that I'm mental because of it). Please to all that read this, do not use cutting to cope. It stops working and even if the scars heal, the memories don't. After getting caught cutting once my therapist gave me two different tools to feel. The first was biofeedback, in other words, listening to soothing music while breathing slowly. It allows the mind to calm itself and feel again. The second, and surprisingly most useful, coping strategy given to me by her was bubbles. Not just any bubble either, the ones that you can catch were what worked. I'm 18 now and it still works. I'm not sure why maybe because it is something fun. Maybe because it causes others around me to laugh. All I know is that it still works for me.



   Now that I've given what I meant by "INFJ Depression", I have a question to anyone that reads this; INFJ or otherwise. We've all been in a depression of some sort before so please let me know; What strategies do you use to get out of your depression?





-Sandra, an INFJ




Relationships/ the dream man

           It proves difficult to be in a relationship as an INFJ. The "perfect person" for us is almost always out of reach. My last relationship was with Mr. wonderful. He was protective, creative, different. He had manners and an amazing sense of humor. We actually met through LARPing (live action role playing) of all things. Each date proved almost perfect.


       The problem was honestly with me. At first I couldn't explain why I was unhappy with him. Everyone in my family loved him, his family loved me, and he made it clear he wanted a long term relationship. How could I possibly be unhappy? It wasn't until weeks after I ended it that I realized the problem. He was too much for me. He was always either throwing a million different meaningless questions my way or expecting me to talk. If I were anyone else that would have been awesome. However, as an INFJ, I don't like meaningless talk. I run out of energy too fast and end up wanting to go home. The meaningful conversations we had were too much too fast. I knew that he wanted me to trust him, I could feel how much he needed me to, so I often tried to open up. That just made each time going out worse. I knew that there would be a long revealing conversation that I wasn't ready for and that he'd expect me to still be okay afterward.


       Another big problem was that we could never just be quiet. As an introvert sometimes I just need silence. I can feel and think more when nothing is being said. If there is always talking than I'm always analyzing the person, not myself. I lose my feelings in the words they say and find myself zoning out or wanting alone time. Even when I was having downtime he needed me to talk. He needed me to text, or call, or be mushy. Once he called me and fussed because I hadn't texted him for a few days then he tried to hold small talk. I was emotionally overloaded at that point and tried my hardest to get off the call (which I hate talking on the phone anyway). The next date I couldn't help but continuously be self-conscious about everything. Was I not good enough? He could definitely do better.


     I know it is just as hard for a person to date an INFJ as it is for an INFJ to date in general. However, this many things adding up so quickly caused me to have an emotional shut down. I would just stay in my room and not talk to anyone. I stopped my feelings, stopped caring about other people's feelings, and just stopped. I call this the "INFJ Depression" (I'll write a post going more into that in the future). After, only slightly, reawakening my emotions I ended the relationship. That made me go into another depression because I know that he was the ideal "perfect man" for so many people. He gave me present, held doors open, paid for everything. He cooked like a pro, and was so friendly. However he was just not the guy for me. Maybe someday I'll find "The One", but until then I'm okay with my few close friends. They are more than enough to satisfy my social need.




-Sandra, an INFJ


Saturday, October 25, 2014

"People Pleaser."

I've been called a people pleaser before; multiple times actually. Each time it feels like a knife if being driven through me. It hurts for people to think I just want to please them. Not because I don't want to make them happy, but because it makes everything I say sound shallow.


Calling me a people pleaser destroys everything that I'm trying to accomplish. I do try to please people because I can feel their displeasure as if it were my own. However, I will never just lie to make someone happy. 


I am not a "people pleaser" and find it very offensive. I'm sure other INFJ types would agree. We meant the things we say because they come from our souls. Trying to avoid hurting others does not make us people pleasers; it means we are trying to avoid the negative feeling that will be inflicted on us.





-Sandra, an INFJ


Friday, October 24, 2014

What is an INFJ/the point of this blog?

Okay so before I start truly posting to this blog I feel the need to explain what INFJ is.

 

INFJ stands for Introverted iNtuitive Feeling Judging. It is the rarest of the personality MBTI personality types. http://www.personalitypage.com/INFJ.html < this link has a good description of what personality fits with the INFJ, I would give my own description, but I'm not sure how accurate it would be.

 

Being one of the rarest types, INFJs normally feel like they don't belong. That is part of the reason I made this blog. After realizing that there were other people out there who understood me, I felt the need to show others that they aren't exactly alone either.

 

Mind you this blog is more than for just INFJs and actually focuses more on the way it has affected my life; less on the type itself: no two people are exactly the same even if they have the same personality type.

 

I really do encourage people to find out their personality type, it's actually extremely accurate and really fun!





-Sandra, an INFJ


Thursday, October 23, 2014

First Post

This is my first time doing a blog that isn't just based on poetry.


I learned a while ago that I am an INFJ personality type. After reading so much about my type I decided that I want to share my own experiences with anyone who wants to read them.


I'm not so sure about doing so, but I know that other INFJ types want to find more people that understand them, just like I do. I apologize for any grammar or spelling mistakes, or if I say anything offensive.


I'll start actually posting after school tomorrow.




-Sandra, an INFJ