Zero
The Fiend
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- Mar 10, 2008
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It's occurred to me that on several occasions people seem to think I'm very upset when I'm not.
In RL I'm a very patient person. Somewhat because I can preoccupy myself, even when I have nothing to entertain me.
First, there are probably some basic areas of temperament I display:
Reserved, Casual and Upset.
*Note that I haven't really thought about this in depth, I'm just making an attempt at it and it's pretty much a first, general draft. That is to say, it's not absolute, just what I've observed of my tendencies.
Reserved:
I'm usually in reserved mode when facing a situation I'm unsure about. That includes large social situations, new social situations, new people, and people who've started acting different.
1. "Recluse" Mode. Like most INTPs, my first mode of reservation is to be quiet and reclusive. If I'm in a crowd of 3+ people and there's no urgency for communication I will probably say very little. Sometimes I will be overwhelmed by the number of people or simply get bored and will wander off to somewhere where I can be alone.
2. "Crowd Control" Mode. My second mode of reservation is making small talk. If I'm not sure about a person, I don't mind kind of participating in a few questions. I don't necessarily like it and it becomes worse when there are more people.
3. "Acquaintance" Mode. The third mode of reservation is one in which I know what the common thread is in people around me. So I might seem somewhat social for an introvert. I perk conversations by hitting on the topics that are associated with the group. For instance I do sometimes attend church functions and I talk in accordance with that fact.
4. "Peace Out" Mode. When I become suspicious or wary of someone there's pretty much no turning back. This is a mode I've developed in order to avoid the later modes under upset. The minute this mode is trigger I can usually assume I've already made tracks where I shouldn't have. I try to cover up the tracks, clarify that there aren't any hard feelings, that nothing is wrong and then I tend to back out of the conversations. Compared to the emotional torture of the alternative modes, this is ideal.
Casual:
You may understand this musing to take place in the actual order that I get use to people. Some of it isn't really in an order though.
5. "Competitive" Mode. The first Casual mode and fifth overall mode I would say is competitive. On a scale I would say four and five are spaced closely compared to the space between 1--2--3--4/5. If no red flag goes up, but we seem to be having a discuss/debate, I will continue to prompt it. This is fun to me. Though if it seems like it just keeps going around and around I can get Irked or impatient.
6. "Kidding" Mode. Probably the hardest mode for me is figuring out when people are kidding and kidding back. It's something that I've had to develop and could be somewhat a part of competitive mode, as I noticed people like to "josh" with each other, but the underlining reason being "friendly" competition. Kidding is something I've had to develop. It's almost impossible for me to go back and forth between 5 and 6, but I try to remind myself that if someone makes a very rude or off topic comment they might be joking. "Kidding" has to be here, because if it wasn't I'd go from 5 to Upset, like I did when I was younger.
7. "Comfortable" Mode. When I start to feel comfortable with people or with where I am I may not be careful about my language. Usually up until this point I won't curse. If I have any reservations I won't go cursing around people. I tend to curse less around a group, seeing as I'm not usually as comfortable with every individual and it's a group...
8a. "Friend" Mode. These are people I'll curse around and put in danger to satisfy my sudden decisions. They're people I trust to listen to me if I need something and vice versa, I try to be a reliable friend. These are people I'll let annoy me, but still like. It's not like I angry-curse all the time. It's usually when I'm tired or drinking or can't think of the word and won't be bothered by it. Sometimes I do it to be stupid.
8b. "Family" Mode. Specifically reserved for people who are actually in my immediate family or close enough. These people I'll curse around to annoy, do things to annoy, get in the occasional fight and hate/love and all that you have to deal with with family. If I have something petty to complain about it usually goes to family. I can say almost anything around these people.
9. "Awesome" Mode. For some reason I'm put into a very good mood. This doesn't necessarily have to be projected onto people I trust. I pretty much go around pretending to be awesome, thinking I'm awesome. It's pretty much a "silly" mode. Though I don't get really, extremely silly.
10. "Silly" Mode. I don't think I've ever been totally, extremely silly, but I have to assume it could happen. I bet people in my family would say I've been silly before.
11. "Stupid" Mode. I guess this is the best transition to Upset. In stupid mode I usually feel comfortable enough to think nothing will go wrong. My suspicion is usually gone and I'm just being careless when everything falls apart. In this mode I could do or say something that would normally be harmless and it turns on me quiet suddenly. Usually someone snaps and I blame it on myself for not paying attention.
Upset:
These are just the moods I tend to go into given the circumstance. Usually I'm tired or already annoyed by something. 11 wouldn't actually transition into 12, it would instantly drop into something else.
11. "Tired" Mode. Not feeling good, for whatever reason, tired, hungry, sick, etc... will usually make me on edge. In this mode I can snap at people, but it doesn't usually mean anything. I hate being asked over and over what's wrong and answer, over and over, I'm tired, etc... Because I'm tired, etc...
12. "Patient" Mode. In a situation where I have to be extremely patient with the situation or a person I'll exercise "Patient" mode. People might think there is something wrong, but I'll usually give the same responses as in "Tired" mode. If I'm in this mode for a long time I might just drop whatever I'm doing and leave, I may snap or I'll start showing the fact that I AM annoyed.
13. "Irked" Mode. Of my being upset modes, this is one that could be caused simply by misunderstanding. In irked mode I might be blunt or try to control my annoyance. I tend to mentioned that either I'm (very) upset or get right down to it and rant.
14. "WTF" Mode. WTF mode is usually produced due to, or after, patient mode. My patience has been spent and I'll be like "What the Fuck?" This mode is usually one in which I address a situation. I tend to be very blunt when I get to this point. I'll ask people wtf their problem is, etc...
15. "Brick by Brick". This mode is probably back to back with WTF. In WTF I'll probably curse at someone. BbB, not so much. In this sort of mode I either attack a person or something they've done and pull it apart. This mode tends to be caused by over extension of Patient or Irked, sometimes in combination. When in this mode people may not understand just how angry I am.
Here's an example of my a to another person about someone I was incredibly upset over. I was in a writing group with another person and discussing someone who was really trying on my patience. I absolutely hated her. She couldn't write for shit and her gaggle of friends were kissing her ass. Previous to sending this to the person I was having the conversation with, I didn't know they were all close friends. Also, before sending this message I had told this person that I was extremely upset about the girl I wrote about. This is only a segment of the message, which was much longer and had more of the "rant" in it. Due to this conversation and how it turned out, I promptly left the group and wish it to hell.
This may not look that upset, but this is me being beyond upset. She was of course, upset when she replied and told me that she and this person were like family. That cleared up a lot for me about the groups and I made the most peaceful exit I could.
16. "Breakdown" Mode. I think this is pretty self-explanatory. When the situation suddenly changes, in the case of stupid mode, I may suddenly break down. In a case like being stupid, I usually break down just because I'm shocked or recovering from shock. Another reason to breakdown is I'm completely overwhelmed, I've caused a situation, it's become a very bad situation and I have no control over it. I'm usually already tired and out of it when I breakdown.
17. "Aftermath". After a breakdown it takes me anywhere from a couple of weeks to a couple years to work though it and get over it. Once I'm "over it" it'll usually make me angry to remember, not depressed, speculative and/or guilty. This is improvement compared to tediously thinking through the situation over and over again. Thinking of what I should've done, what I should've avoided, etc... the aftermath of any upset mode, but especially a breakdown, makes me think of ways to avoid it. Which is why some of my modes have developed. 15-17 are situations I could say I don't officially get over. I leave or time heals the wounds, as they say. 15, if clarified or sympathized with, I could get over completely. When it seems to me that they didn't mean any real harm and I just took it the wrong way I shrug it off. But otherwise 15-16 leave a permanent mark.
Irked is usually as angry as I'll get.
The aftermath of a bad situation on a forum is usually that I'll leave. I tend to tell people I'm leaving though, because I also take long breaks from forums and games and such. It also establishes, for me, that I'm never going back to that place. That it's gone. If I had little to no interaction in a place I'll just leave though.
I get the feeling that this is kind of unusual.
How does your temper work out?
In RL I'm a very patient person. Somewhat because I can preoccupy myself, even when I have nothing to entertain me.
First, there are probably some basic areas of temperament I display:
Reserved, Casual and Upset.
*Note that I haven't really thought about this in depth, I'm just making an attempt at it and it's pretty much a first, general draft. That is to say, it's not absolute, just what I've observed of my tendencies.
Reserved:
I'm usually in reserved mode when facing a situation I'm unsure about. That includes large social situations, new social situations, new people, and people who've started acting different.
1. "Recluse" Mode. Like most INTPs, my first mode of reservation is to be quiet and reclusive. If I'm in a crowd of 3+ people and there's no urgency for communication I will probably say very little. Sometimes I will be overwhelmed by the number of people or simply get bored and will wander off to somewhere where I can be alone.
2. "Crowd Control" Mode. My second mode of reservation is making small talk. If I'm not sure about a person, I don't mind kind of participating in a few questions. I don't necessarily like it and it becomes worse when there are more people.
3. "Acquaintance" Mode. The third mode of reservation is one in which I know what the common thread is in people around me. So I might seem somewhat social for an introvert. I perk conversations by hitting on the topics that are associated with the group. For instance I do sometimes attend church functions and I talk in accordance with that fact.
4. "Peace Out" Mode. When I become suspicious or wary of someone there's pretty much no turning back. This is a mode I've developed in order to avoid the later modes under upset. The minute this mode is trigger I can usually assume I've already made tracks where I shouldn't have. I try to cover up the tracks, clarify that there aren't any hard feelings, that nothing is wrong and then I tend to back out of the conversations. Compared to the emotional torture of the alternative modes, this is ideal.
Casual:
You may understand this musing to take place in the actual order that I get use to people. Some of it isn't really in an order though.
5. "Competitive" Mode. The first Casual mode and fifth overall mode I would say is competitive. On a scale I would say four and five are spaced closely compared to the space between 1--2--3--4/5. If no red flag goes up, but we seem to be having a discuss/debate, I will continue to prompt it. This is fun to me. Though if it seems like it just keeps going around and around I can get Irked or impatient.
6. "Kidding" Mode. Probably the hardest mode for me is figuring out when people are kidding and kidding back. It's something that I've had to develop and could be somewhat a part of competitive mode, as I noticed people like to "josh" with each other, but the underlining reason being "friendly" competition. Kidding is something I've had to develop. It's almost impossible for me to go back and forth between 5 and 6, but I try to remind myself that if someone makes a very rude or off topic comment they might be joking. "Kidding" has to be here, because if it wasn't I'd go from 5 to Upset, like I did when I was younger.
7. "Comfortable" Mode. When I start to feel comfortable with people or with where I am I may not be careful about my language. Usually up until this point I won't curse. If I have any reservations I won't go cursing around people. I tend to curse less around a group, seeing as I'm not usually as comfortable with every individual and it's a group...
8a. "Friend" Mode. These are people I'll curse around and put in danger to satisfy my sudden decisions. They're people I trust to listen to me if I need something and vice versa, I try to be a reliable friend. These are people I'll let annoy me, but still like. It's not like I angry-curse all the time. It's usually when I'm tired or drinking or can't think of the word and won't be bothered by it. Sometimes I do it to be stupid.
8b. "Family" Mode. Specifically reserved for people who are actually in my immediate family or close enough. These people I'll curse around to annoy, do things to annoy, get in the occasional fight and hate/love and all that you have to deal with with family. If I have something petty to complain about it usually goes to family. I can say almost anything around these people.
9. "Awesome" Mode. For some reason I'm put into a very good mood. This doesn't necessarily have to be projected onto people I trust. I pretty much go around pretending to be awesome, thinking I'm awesome. It's pretty much a "silly" mode. Though I don't get really, extremely silly.
10. "Silly" Mode. I don't think I've ever been totally, extremely silly, but I have to assume it could happen. I bet people in my family would say I've been silly before.
11. "Stupid" Mode. I guess this is the best transition to Upset. In stupid mode I usually feel comfortable enough to think nothing will go wrong. My suspicion is usually gone and I'm just being careless when everything falls apart. In this mode I could do or say something that would normally be harmless and it turns on me quiet suddenly. Usually someone snaps and I blame it on myself for not paying attention.
Upset:
These are just the moods I tend to go into given the circumstance. Usually I'm tired or already annoyed by something. 11 wouldn't actually transition into 12, it would instantly drop into something else.
11. "Tired" Mode. Not feeling good, for whatever reason, tired, hungry, sick, etc... will usually make me on edge. In this mode I can snap at people, but it doesn't usually mean anything. I hate being asked over and over what's wrong and answer, over and over, I'm tired, etc... Because I'm tired, etc...
12. "Patient" Mode. In a situation where I have to be extremely patient with the situation or a person I'll exercise "Patient" mode. People might think there is something wrong, but I'll usually give the same responses as in "Tired" mode. If I'm in this mode for a long time I might just drop whatever I'm doing and leave, I may snap or I'll start showing the fact that I AM annoyed.
13. "Irked" Mode. Of my being upset modes, this is one that could be caused simply by misunderstanding. In irked mode I might be blunt or try to control my annoyance. I tend to mentioned that either I'm (very) upset or get right down to it and rant.
14. "WTF" Mode. WTF mode is usually produced due to, or after, patient mode. My patience has been spent and I'll be like "What the Fuck?" This mode is usually one in which I address a situation. I tend to be very blunt when I get to this point. I'll ask people wtf their problem is, etc...
15. "Brick by Brick". This mode is probably back to back with WTF. In WTF I'll probably curse at someone. BbB, not so much. In this sort of mode I either attack a person or something they've done and pull it apart. This mode tends to be caused by over extension of Patient or Irked, sometimes in combination. When in this mode people may not understand just how angry I am.
Here's an example of my a to another person about someone I was incredibly upset over. I was in a writing group with another person and discussing someone who was really trying on my patience. I absolutely hated her. She couldn't write for shit and her gaggle of friends were kissing her ass. Previous to sending this to the person I was having the conversation with, I didn't know they were all close friends. Also, before sending this message I had told this person that I was extremely upset about the girl I wrote about. This is only a segment of the message, which was much longer and had more of the "rant" in it. Due to this conversation and how it turned out, I promptly left the group and wish it to hell.
....I don't know how anyone could miss this. Her subject matter is horrible. She over dramatized situations without experience or reference. She overly sensitive and defensive- which often does result in arrogance as compensation. As she is now, she completely lacks in quality. Not only as a writer, but as a decent person. As a philosophical/psychological inquiry it could be discussed the process of "personhood" and the endeavor that is and the places in which we find ourselves in defining that. As humans if we do not constantly re-examine ourselves, it is said, our life has no value. So her flaws are those of an overly sensitive and unrealistic thinking youth (therefore to be expected?). She has probably not experienced much and certainly has not experienced or put herself in the place of the experiences she writes on.
It is more frustrating to me that she is rewarded for her behavior. Anyone who is older than she is should feel the responsibility to instill the ethics of our society. In this day and age, that's not demanding very much. We ask that people be sound. We ask that they appreciate, consider and respect other people. I'm not saying she needs to be directly dealt with, but rewarding her poor skill is just beyond me. This is what I don't understand. Is it entirely clear?
This may not look that upset, but this is me being beyond upset. She was of course, upset when she replied and told me that she and this person were like family. That cleared up a lot for me about the groups and I made the most peaceful exit I could.
16. "Breakdown" Mode. I think this is pretty self-explanatory. When the situation suddenly changes, in the case of stupid mode, I may suddenly break down. In a case like being stupid, I usually break down just because I'm shocked or recovering from shock. Another reason to breakdown is I'm completely overwhelmed, I've caused a situation, it's become a very bad situation and I have no control over it. I'm usually already tired and out of it when I breakdown.
17. "Aftermath". After a breakdown it takes me anywhere from a couple of weeks to a couple years to work though it and get over it. Once I'm "over it" it'll usually make me angry to remember, not depressed, speculative and/or guilty. This is improvement compared to tediously thinking through the situation over and over again. Thinking of what I should've done, what I should've avoided, etc... the aftermath of any upset mode, but especially a breakdown, makes me think of ways to avoid it. Which is why some of my modes have developed. 15-17 are situations I could say I don't officially get over. I leave or time heals the wounds, as they say. 15, if clarified or sympathized with, I could get over completely. When it seems to me that they didn't mean any real harm and I just took it the wrong way I shrug it off. But otherwise 15-16 leave a permanent mark.
Irked is usually as angry as I'll get.
The aftermath of a bad situation on a forum is usually that I'll leave. I tend to tell people I'm leaving though, because I also take long breaks from forums and games and such. It also establishes, for me, that I'm never going back to that place. That it's gone. If I had little to no interaction in a place I'll just leave though.
I get the feeling that this is kind of unusual.
How does your temper work out?