Are You An Introverted Feeler or an Extraverted Feeler? Comparing and Contrasting
When it comes to the feeling preference in Myers-Briggs theory, there tends to be a lot of confusion and “side-taking” in the community. I see Fi-users put down Fe-users as “fake” and I see Fe-users put down Fi-users as “selfish”. It all gets a little bit tiring, and frustrating for individuals who feel misunderstood in the community for simply being who they are.
Not sure what your personality type is? Take our new personality questionnaire here. Or you can take the official MBTI® here.
Feeling-Perceiving types (FPs) value Introverted Feeling, and Feeling-Judging types (FJs) value Extraverted Feeling.
Are You An Introverted or Extraverted Feeler?
No matter what type of feeling you use, whether it’s introverted or extraverted feeling, there are certain shared qualities that both types have. These qualities are:
– Both feeling types are concerned with morals and values.
– Both feeling types want harmony in their environment.
– Both feeling types dislike conflict.
– Both feeling types tend to dislike handing out criticism and tend to take criticism personally.
– Both feeling types (if healthy) are empathetic.
– Both feeling types consider the human implications of their decisions.
– Both feeling types try to “step into” a situation when making a decision to see how it will impact the people involved.
The Differences:
The major difference between introverted feeling and extraverted feeling lies in where one focuses their attention and gathers their emotional input more. Introverted feelers (or Fi-users for short) look inside themselves to gain a sense of identity, values, independent morals, and ethics. Fe-users look outside themselves to understand their values, morals, and the emotions and ethics of others.
When making a decision, a Fi-user will ask themselves “How does this align with my values? Do I feel right about this? What does my gut instinct tell me? Is this what I want?”. Introverted feeling is subjective so it looks at the subject (him or herself) first when deciding. Carl Jung said of introverted feeling that it is “intensive rather than extensive”.
When a Fe-user makes a decision they will ask themselves “How will this impact others? Will this maintain harmony? Is this right? How will this make people feel?”. Extraverted feeling is objective so it looks at the world outside when it decides.
Does this mean that Fi-users don’t care about how other people are impacted? Does this mean that that Fe-users never look inside themselves and to their own values? Absolutely not. But generally, Fi-users will look inside first, and Fe-users will look outside first. This is why Fe-users tend to think out their decisions and “talk them out” with other people. They are trying to discern whether or not their decisions are agreeable, sensible to others, and impact others in a positive way. Both Te (extraverted thinking) and Fe users tend to “talk out” or extravert their decision-making.
Fi-users are less in need of assurance from others for their decisions and care less whether or not their decisions are objective because their subjective values take precedence over objective values. They have an inner serenity and resolve regarding their values and feel that everyone has the right and responsibility to their own independent values and feelings. They make their decisions in an internal way and are less likely to “talk out” decisions with others.
The introverted feeling type may not seem as expressive as the extraverted feeling type. Isabel Briggs-Myers says of Fi-users, “Introverted feeling types have a wealth of warmth and enthusiasm, but they may not show it until they know someone well. They wear their warmth inside, like a fur-lined coat. Reliance on feeling leads them to judge everything by personal values; they know what is most important to them, and they protect it at all costs.”
Bill Watterson, the cartoonist of Calvin and Hobbes, is considered by many typologists to be a Fi-user. You can get a good glimpse of the Fi-mindset in these quotes:
“Doing everything myself kept the strip very honest and personal – everything having to do with Calvin and Hobbes expressed my own ideas, my own values, my own way.”
“We all have different desires and needs, but if we don’t discover what we want from ourselves and what we stand for, we will live passively and unfulfilled.”
– Bill Watterson
Now Extraverted Feeling types (Fe-users) may really be inspired by Watterson’s quotes (I know I am). Because they speak of values the Fe-user is naturally interested as a feeling type. However, Fe-users are more likely to look outside and consider “what do other people need from me? what are the expectations people have for me? do my internal values and desires coincide with the needs of others? What if my values make no sense at all!”. The Fe-user tends to look outside, at books, trusted authorities, and friendships to understand value systems and see which ones they identify with and seem trustworthy. They may put their internal identity and desires on hold in an effort to meet the expectations of others. They are more likely to distrust their own needs and values and be more skeptical of them.
The mom who leads with Fe can bury herself in her children’s needs, forever forgetting her own individual desires. A Fi-user is capable of doing the same thing if they feel a calling to selflessly serve their children, but generally they will do this out of a conviction or personal value, whereas the Fe-user will do this because they just naturally think outside first, and may forget to even look inside to consider what their own needs or desires are (like maybe they’d actually really like to be an artist, but they haven’t stopped to consider it).
Isabel Briggs-Myers says of Fe-users, “The extraverted feeling types radiate warmth and fellowship, and they have a vital need to find corresponding feelings in others and to meet a warm response….Their intense concentration on other people’s viewpoints sometimes makes them lose sight of the value of their own.”
Carl Jung himself believed Johann Wolfgang von Goethe to be an extraverted feeling type. You can get a good glimpse of the Fe mindset from these quotes:
“A man’s manners are a mirror in which he shows his portrait.”
“Be generous with kindly words, especially about those who are absent.”
“If you treat an individual as he is, he will remain as he is. But if you treat him as if he were what he ought to be and could be, he will become what he ought to be and could be.”
– Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
You can see in that last quote by von Goethe, that he believed outward influence shaped the character and behavior of a person. Manners, culture, and courtesy were all values that von Goethe spoke of frequently. While Fi-users also tend to value kindness and may value good manners, they are more likely to crave authentic expression and adherence to one’s own individual story than to follow a pre-established “code” about how one should behave.
Every Individual Is Unique
Your background, upbringing, environment, and even the placement of your feeling preference will change how you display and experience it. No two Fi-users are alike and no two Fe-users are alike. How an ENFJ expresses Fe is going to be very different from how an ISFJ expresses Fe. How an INFP experiences Fi is going to be very different from how an ESFP expresses Fi. The values of one feeling type might be far different from the values of another feeling type. So as always we need to be careful not to put all Fe-users or Fi-users in a “box” and assume they all do the same things.
Find out more about your personality type in our eBook, Discovering You: Unlocking the Power of Personality Type.
If you’d like more information on whether or not you relate to introverted or extroverted feeling, be sure to check out these articles:
10 Signs That You Might Be an Introverted Feeler
10 Signs That You Might Be an Extraverted Feeler
6 Major Misconceptions About Feeling Types
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
Want to discover more about personality type? Get the inside scoop with Susan Storm on all things typological, along with special subscriber freebies, and discounts on new eBooks and courses! Join our newsletter today!
I find that Fi dom is easily hurtful without realising it. Fe knows when he say something hurtful. Fe try to fix quickly because they are aware of their mistake.
Fi says what he thinks when he thinks, like SFP. STP-Fe pretend to speak with frankness, but in reality, they pays attention to their words. (a little less during adolescence)
I am INFJ with 98% on the I and 60/40 split on the J. I wasn’t born to use Fe. I am primarily suited to use Fi. Depending on where you read on the net I should be institutionalized. I had a really rough time growing up getting along with my peers. My few friends commented that I was too old for my age but they liked me anyway. When I went to college and saw old patterns repeating I made a intellectual effort to observe my new peers and try to act more like them. I developed Fe. I have spent the majority of my adult life trying to be socially normal and now that I am old, I see less need. Most of my core values are of benefit to society at large. Where society and I differ I switch back and forth with ease as it suits the situation. But at my core, I am infj with Fi.
my Fe made me change my mind and started a relationship with him, my first love.
the 1st impression didn’t feel good to me. he sensed it. i felt guilty. so i decided to compensate.
this long time relationship hurt me physically and emotionally.