How to Fight Guilt as an INFJ
byHere are four practices you can implement that will, with time, help you thrive as an INFJ and throw off guilt’s strangle-hold.
The INFJ personality type is one of the eight introverted types in the Myers-Briggs system. Browse all of our INFJ stories below, or check out our favorite posts about the INFJ type, the INFJ door slam, and some INFJ secrets.
Here are four practices you can implement that will, with time, help you thrive as an INFJ and throw off guilt’s strangle-hold.
Whatever we INFJs choose to do for work, we have a strong need for it to be meaningful. Here are five truths I’ve learned about creating meaning.
You don’t have to be an INFJ personality to start a blog. Nevertheless, here’s what blogging did for me as an INFJ, and how you can start your own.
Change inevitably creates confusion. From an INFJ’s perspective, here’s why change is hard, and how you can deal with it anyway.
The INFJ may be the rarest Myers-Briggs personality type, but there’s no shortage of INFJs making a big impact on the world.
Here are four personality pitfalls that INFJs can fall into, plus how to avoid them — and become the healthy version of ourselves we are meant to be.
All families have their problems, sure, but when you’re the only INFJ in yours, these problems can be amplified for you to the extreme.
The things we INFJs say to ourselves can be just plain abusive sometimes. Here are four ways INFJs can be their own worst enemies, plus what helped me.
As INFJs, we seek books not only to understand, but also to be understood, to find characters who remind us that we are not alone.
As a highly sensitive introvert and INFJ, I had to learn to connect to my own body and emotions in order to heal my depression.