Watch the video.
If you don’t have the 21 minutes to watch the video, here’s the important parts:
Two kinds of happiness – There are two kinds of happiness: natural happiness and synthetic happiness. Natural happiness is happiness we get when get what we want. Synthetic happiness is synthesized happiness. It’s happiness we make when we don’t get what we want.
Natural happiness is not better – Synthetic happiness produces a measurable, testable change. People are not just making it up when they say they’re happy despite not getting what they want. The video talks about an experiment that was done to prove this.
Before choosing, choices promote natural happiness – When you don’t have to choose, having a lot of choices makes you naturally happy.
After choosing, choices inhibit the creation of synthetic happiness – When we have the ability to change our minds, we become less happy because we aren’t sure if we made the right decision. The video talks about a Harvard psychological experiment that demonstrates this.
How this applies to INFPs
INFPs have problems making decisions for two reasons:
- We want to make the right choice, the perfect choice. We end up wasting a lot of time trying to gather up enough data for us to choose. This could be anything from which career to pursue to where to eat today.
- After we make the choice and as soon as the first sign of adversity hits us, we start thinking that if we had made the perfect choice then we wouldn’t have all these problems. So we start second guessing that choice. Should we have chosen something else?
It’s this second guessing that inhibits our ability to find happiness in the choice we made. This is synthetic happiness and I believe synthetic happiness is real. I believe it’s real because INFPs create synthetic happiness all the time.
Every time on a forum thread where I see an INFP saying that the world wasn’t created for INFPs to successful that’s an INFP creating synthetic happiness. I see the creation of synthetic happiness in every excuse INFPs use to blame our unhappiness on things we believe are outside their control (I’m shy and can’t meet people, the world doesn’t understand me). We make ourselves better by saying that our lot in life isn’t really our choice.
Second guessing kills happiness and success
Could we have made a better choice? Maybe. Here’s the real question. How much time are we going to waste wondering if we made the right decision instead of fully committing to the decision we did make?
Success and self-esteem go hand-in-hand. When we succeed at something we feel better about ourselves. Success and happiness aren’t directly related because we can succeed at something unimportant which won’t make us happy. There’s a saying. When climbing the ladder of success, make sure it’s leaning against the right wall.
I’m talking about all types of success. Success at making friends. Success at becoming financially stable. Success at becoming our Ideal Self. However, success requires dedication and full commitment. INFPs never make that full commitment because think we can go back and make a better choice.
Success doesn’t lead to happiness, but the self-confidence we gain will keep us going until we finally succeed at something that does bring natural happiness. So if natural happiness comes from getting what we want? Does this mean we’re unhappy getting to what we want? Of course, people can be happy in the journey, but it’s the happiness we find in the journey. It’s the happiness we make. It’s synthetic happiness.
Burning bridges leads to happiness
When we have no choice but to succeed, we will do everything we can possibly do not to fail. We will work our asses off to not fail because failing means dire consequences.
When I was 19, I moved out my parent’s house. I just couldn’t live with them and their rules any longer. So with no job, one month’s rent and telling my parents I’m never speaking to them again, I moved in with some friends. I had to find a job fast, anything. I couldn’t fail because I had nowhere else to go. I ended up finding a job serving popcorn at a movie theater.
I didn’t waste anytime second-guessing my decision because I couldn’t unmake my decision. It was do or die. So instead of that energy focused behind me. All my energy was focused on succeeding. I was never happier.
Committing to choices means risk especially if we can’t go back. INFPs rarely regret the choices we made that didn’t turn out well because it makes us into the people we are. INFPs regret the choices we didn’t make because it’s another lost opportunity to discover more about ourselves. It’s another chance to become our Ideal Self that we didn’t take.
The best thing about making choices we can’t back out of, we are happier. As that Harvard experiment in the video demonstrates, we come to decide that we like the decision we made because we don’t have a choice.





E.
Apr 16, 2010
5:37 pm
This post is incredible. It totally resonates with me. I stumbled upon your blog after numerous reads (I mean numerous. Almost a new found obsession! But in a soul searching kind of way.) of online INFP descriptions and related materials. I’ve had issues about decision-making my entire life. After much “analysis-paralysis” I come to a decision and I commit to that decision. Especially when it is a major life altering decision that entails moving to Hawaii to go to grad school and leaving a full time job of four years (right out of undergrad). (I read comments to previous posts about other people doing this very thing. I guess my idea is not very original! But at least it’s a good one.) I am 26 and can definitely relate to your posts. I may not know about marriage, family and kids but I def. can relate in other ways. Thanks for your words.
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ockhamdesign Reply:
April 18th, 2010 at 2:47 am
I’m hope this INFP blog helps. I’m 39 and I’m still looking for the answers that work for me. There’s much more that I want to do and my life has been on pause. Writing this blog helps me sort out issues and thoughts that I have about the INFP personality type.
I also suggest looking outside just INFP related writing to find answers. I have. I would recommend looking at another TED.com video called The Paradox of Choice.
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Catherine Vibert
Apr 26, 2010
4:56 am
Really this is quite perfect for me. Having made a major choice to move across the country and take care of my pa two years ago, I’m now in second guessing mode. This article really hits home on the fully committing front. And I fully agree with the concept of synthesized happiness. It’s true, it works! I never could understand why people didn’t do that more, some folks. But that imagination can soothe quite effectively.
Again, I thank you for your excellent thoughts Corin.
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ockhamdesign Reply:
May 3rd, 2010 at 9:39 am
I’m trying not to second guess my decisions but it’s hard. If I only would have done this or that then I would be somehow happier. Eventually, I just realize that even if I made a bad decision, I’m far happier than letting time pass and having the decision made for me instead.
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Ben
Apr 28, 2010
8:32 am
I can totally relate to this. I’m always second guessing myself. After most encounters with people I’m like “Should I have said that?” “That was a dumb thing to say” I’ve recently started doing this thing where if people I have added on MSN/FaceBook etc piss me off I just delete them. It’s quite a gratifying feeling haha. For some reason I don’t second guess those decisions though because those people often have contributed nothing to my life and are not exactly all that nice. But that only becomes evident after I’ve talked to them for a while. It’s like cutting someone out of your life that you barely ever talked to or liked. I think it’s kind of my way of trying to be in control of something.
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ockhamdesign Reply:
May 3rd, 2010 at 9:44 am
I usually don’t mind keeping people who don’t detract from my life. I find it’s always good to let people in since my good friends now were at the edges of my life until something changed in me and I needed to find other people to relate to.
However, I do try to distance myself from those how make my life worse. I think everyone is doing their best to get those two steps forward. Anyone that takes you the one step back is wasting your time.
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antonius bimo
Apr 30, 2010
12:36 pm
yups!
we are “to good to be true” on gathering a huge information objectively, but on the other side the data confusing us on making a fast and realistic decision!
I hardly say to myself: when I make decision, don’t look back!, just go straight fordward! and stay commit with my last decision!
I fell much happier on this state then other moment of my live
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ockhamdesign Reply:
May 3rd, 2010 at 9:47 am
Since were feelers, everything does eventually come down to an emotional feeling decisions.
Usually all my decisions come down to one question: will I regret not doing this later even though doing this now may turn out to be a huge mistake?
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Jennifer M.
May 9, 2010
8:12 pm
This post is great! I have always struggled with (big) decision making. Stuff like college, grad school, moving, etc. A lot of times I’ll get so paralyzed in the fear of making the wrong choice that I end up deciding to do nothing! Although then sometimes that at least gives me some peace b/c I know I’ve at least entertained the other possibilities.
The times I have jumped ahead and made a big decision like that, it usually works out, although sometimes I do second-guess myself. Other times I jump in and realize it was totally the wrong choice so I jump back out. I’m sure I look like a flake when I do this, but I figure that was just my way of figuring out what would work for me so I don’t sweat it.
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ockhamdesign Reply:
May 10th, 2010 at 3:08 pm
I do this exercise every month or so called Zero-Based Thinking. Basically, I ask myself this questions: “Knowing what I know now, would I have gotten into this in the first place?” This applies to people I meet and activities I do. If the answer is no, I try to get out as quick as I can. As an INFP, sometimes that answer is “I don’t know yet.” For the I-don’t-know’s, I keep going until I get a very definite sense of no. I don’t always know if things are write but I always no if something is very wrong. I pay attention to the wrong feeling.
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Jennifer M. Reply:
May 10th, 2010 at 8:47 pm
Hmm that’s a very interesting idea. I’m going to have to try that. That’s a better alternative to getting into a bad situation and then feeling stuck there, which is what I usually do.
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Kristen
May 18, 2010
2:04 am
Amazing post! Simply amazing! I am pretty sure I am an INFP and reading this really helped me out with what I am going through lately. Thank you so much for taking the time to post this for everyone!
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izzati
Aug 5, 2010
7:43 am
It’s kind of hard..how do you stop second guessing?
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Corin Reply:
August 5th, 2010 at 10:23 am
You can only second guess if you have 3 things: the time, the option and the inclination. Unfortunately it’s in the INFP nature to second guess because we’re always looking for more information and we delay making decisions and commitments.
However, we can mitigate the inclination with the other two. We second guess if we have the option to second guess. When I make a decisions, I take enough action to get myself pass the point of “if-I-change-my-mind-I’m-pretty-screwed”. At that point, it’s better for me finish than to go back.
Also, second guessing requires time and focus. When I’ve made a decision, I go on to the next thing. There’s always a next thing to do. There’s always something just as important in my life to focus on besides the last decision so I don’t have time to second what I did before.
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