No, it isn't. That isn't what Fe is like at all. I think it's just your Ti getting distracted when your Ne finds interesting stuff.
This is sort of what I experience.
There is typically a battle. Ti is very methodical, wants to make sure everything is balanced neatly, everything makes sense. If it's used without restraint, I tend to not do things at all until I thoroughly understand them (if that is even possible) and otherwise refuse to take risks. It tries to control all of my speech and behavior and make sure my choices are entirely coherent and interlocking. It basically gives me strategy for tasks, if anything, but no inclination to actually carry it out -- developing the strategy itself is the goal.
Ne is sort of the opposite, it is just this radiation of arrows in every direction at once, and I am sort of dragged long behind each one of them to see where each one goes.
Prime example: go on the internet with one focus and a general time limit to find it (Ti, thinking logically) and three hours later I still haven't finished my task because I got dragged off on all these new tangents. Ti actually likes information, so it is pleasured to some degree by the introduction of new mental models built on all these new possibilities I just explored; but at the same time I am frustrated because I couldn't really afford to do that exploration and in terms of priority those new ideas weren't as important as some other things I should have been doing.
Ti likes figuring things out using logic, it doesn't really care much about getting things done. Te is the one that gets things done.
Ti sort of creates a mental model where everything is prioritized correctly. In the establishment of balance of that model, Ti will say certain things have to get done and thus you do them, but in general the closure is reached by the finished design and clarification of the inner model regardless of how much of it is enacted physically.
Te is far more concerned about achieving practical tasks and reaching closure in the external world.