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INTERESTING
PHOTO ROOM |
| Odd Photos |
| Oklahoma City Lights |
| Phoetry - Sort of like Simflipity. |
| |
| THE BLUE ROOM |
| Shake Me When The Album Is Over And He Is Done is an extraordinary look into the realm of offspring and genes. Say no to vinyl as punishment devices, or at least vinyl records. |
| Just
South Of The Old Wooden House -
The party usually happens at night, behind the wooden house.
Almost like an acid trip. |
| As
If A Drowning Man -
The food goes down and then it goes up. You figure it out. |
| Three
Pleads To Nowhere -
I tried not to spill the darkness, but it happened. |
| Kellash -
I remember doing nothing but expecting doing. |
| Bee
Lack -
Candlestick thaws into an empty gut. |
| Eat
Dust - The dust among us. Slowly, but surely, I am dust. |
| Dissolution Years - This old couple drifted apart over the years. I came along and showed them absolutely nothing, so they continued to drift apart, until they killed each other one day. |
| Backdrown -
My shots exploded that day. I was on the beach somewhere with
someone who was having seizures. My friend and I both exploded. |
| Grimy Stations - I woke up from a deep sleep inside this place and I was a different person. |
| Not
A Drop Wasted - He may have stayed up all night, but
not a drop was wasted. |
| Cream Of Ice - Carbon Monoxide and tongue laps, there is nothing better. |
| Wetness - My experience three thousand years ago. It was hell. |
| Peanut
Butter Sandwiches - I am the crust in the garbage. |
| STOP! -
Laziness beyond belief? Are you kidding me? |
| Balcony
Is Sweep -
Being on the edge has syphoned me down. Will the dust ever
clear? |
| Broadway
Extension (Red) -
She was red and full of water. I think I have a tattoo of her
name on my body. I cannot remember the details. |
| Ms.
Ressurreccion Amporo Savignac -
Honest, I was glorified and satisfied while the unexpected
multiplied. |
| Dr. Railroad Wood - Blood, scalpels, and talcum. |
| THE
BLACK ROOM |
| Gravel
Mold Tale Untold - When religion was magic. |
| The
Love For An Azalea Stem - The temple of the Church will
stab the moon in its side. |
| THE
RED ROOM |
| California -
I lost a lot of blood, spinal fluid, bone mass, and forgot
my heart on this little excursion. But there was a Russian
in California |
| Until
Further Notice - Her castle was brand new, lots of stone
and wooden floors. and two books of photos of her when she
was a child. |
| Navel
Gazer in Gaze - It was hard to take air into my lungs
and I almost died. So, she cut my finger off. |
 |
| Three
Guardian Angels -
The photo above was taken and is the only one of the Three
Guardian Angels. She is amazing. |
| PAM'S ROOM |
| Spinal Pam - Pam drove me around town one night. She was not that awesome, but sure was pretty, for a driver. |
 |
| Screenplay Leave is
a horror drama about an adult going back to her hometown. Sometimes,
things are better left alone. |
|
| Global Personality Test Results | Stability (53%) medium which suggests you average somewhere in between being calm and resilient and being anxious and reactive. Orderliness (53%) medium which suggests you are moderately organized, hard working, and reliable while still remaining flexible, efficient, and fun. Extraversion (23%) low which suggests you are very reclusive, quiet, unassertive, and secretive. |
Instinctual Variant Test Results | Sexual | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | 90% | | Social | |||||||||||||||||| | 58% | | Self Preservation | |||||||||||||||||||||||| | 74% | |
Jung Ideal vs. Real Test | Introversion | |||||||||||||||||| | 80% | | |||||||||||||||||| | 80% | | Extroversion | |||||||||||||| | 56% | | |||||||||||| | 46% | | Intuitive | |||||||||||||||||||| | 90% | | |||||||||||||||||||| | 90% | | Sensing | |||||||||||||||||||| | 83% | | |||||||||||||||| | 70% | | Feeling | |||||||||||||||||| | 80% | | |||||||||||| | 46% | | Thinking | |||||||||||||||| | 66% | | |||||||||||||||| | 63% | | Judging | |||||||||||||||| | 63% | | |||||||||||| | 50% | | Perceiving | |||||||||||||| | 53% | | |||||||||||||| | 60% | | ideal you |||||| real you |||||| | ideal type - INFJ, real type - INTP |
THE INDIVIDUALIST
Overview of Type Four
In the artist of all kinds I think one can detect an inherent dilemma, which
belongs to the co-existence of two trends, the urgent need to communicate and
the still more urgent need not to be found....
What more fruitful way to redressing the balance than by portraying one's inner
world in a work of art and then persuading other people to accept it, if not
as real, at least as highly significant? Part of the satisfaction which a creative
person obtains from his achievement may be the feeling that, at last, some
part of his inner life is being accepted which has never been accorded recognition
before. Moreover, since art became an individual matter rather than a task
for
anonymous craftsmen, creative work is generally recognized as being especially
apt for expressing the personal style of an individual (which is of course
closely related to his inner world). The value we place upon authenticity is
often exaggerated;
yet there is a sense in which it is justified. However good a painting or a
piece of music may be, taken quite apart from its creator, the fact that it
is or is
not another expression of the personality of a particular artist is important.
For it either is or is not an addition to our knowledge of that artist; a further
revelation of that mysterious, indefinable and fascinating thing—his
personality. (D. W. Winnicott, quoted in Anthony Storr, The Dynamics of Creation,
58.)
The nature of creativity will probably always remain mysterious because its
basis is irrational—in the feelings and unconscious of those who create—and
because, as Winnicott notes, part of the motive for creating is to remain concealed,
to be unfound by others. Yet the motives given for artistic work—to communicate
and to conceal the self—are but two possible motives which any person
may have for creating. These two motives are, however, particularly appropriate
to
the Four, the artistic temperament among the personality types. Of course,
members of any other personality type can become artists in the sense of making
a livelihood
by producing works of art, however that is defined. Fours, however, are in
search of their identities, and art is the foremost means they have of finding
themselves,
as well as their way of reporting to the world what they have discovered.
In the Feeling Triad
The Four is the personality type which emphasizes the subjective world of feelings,
in creativity and individualism, in introversion and self-absorption, and in
self-torment and self-hatred. In this personality type we see creative artists,
romantic aesthetes, and withdrawn dreamers, people with powerful feelings who
feel different from others because self-consciousness blocks them from getting
outside themselves.
Fours are the most self-aware of the types, and this is the basis of what is
most positive and negative about them. The constant conflict we see in Fours
is between their need to be aware of themselves, so they can find themselves,
and, at the same time, their need to move beyond self-awareness, so they will
not be trapped in self-consciousness. The tension between self-awareness and
self-transcendence can be resolved in creativity. In the creative moment, healthy
Fours harness their emotions without constricting them, not only producing something
beautiful but discovering who they are. In the moment of inspiration, they are,
paradoxically both most themselves and most liberated from themselves. This is
why all forms of creativity are so valued by Fours, and why in its inspired state,
creativity is so hard to sustain. Fours can be inspired only if they have first
transcended themselves, something which is extremely threatening to their self-awareness.
In a sense, then, only by learning not to look for themselves will they find
themselves and renew themselves in the process.
The problem with average Fours, however, is that they try to understand themselves
by introspecting upon their feelings. As they move inward in a search for self,
they become so acutely self-conscious that their subjective emotional states
become the dominant reality for them. And, because even average Fours are so
involved with their emotions, they do not usually express their feelings directly.
Instead, they communicate their feelings indirectly though art, if they have
they talent and training to do so.
The overall direction of their personalities therefore is inward, toward increasing
self-absorption, because Fours feel that they are different from other people,
and they want to know why they feel this way. Ironically, however, they try to
find their place in life by withdrawing from it so they can trace the labyrinth
of their emotions. But the result of their withdrawal is that even average Fours
have noticeable difficulties coping with life, while unhealthy Fours have some
of the most severe emotional difficulties of all the personality types.
Fours tend to compound their emotional difficulties in some striking ways.
Because Fours have identified themselves with their feelings, they begin to
look for
intensity of feeling in all of their activities. The more intensely they feel
something the more real they feel. Thus, average Fours begin to employ their
imaginations to "stir up" their emotional life. They can take even
the most transitory encounter and dwell on it for hours to extract all of its "emotional
juice." The problem is that it becomes difficult for Fours to dwell deeply
in their moods and fantasies if they are still interacting with others. Their
feeling states and self-image become rarefied to a degree that reality will not
support. Increasingly, they begin to withdraw from life and real relationships
and experiences, both to prevent others from interfering with their strong reveries
and moods, and to avoid potential embarrassment and humiliation. As they draw
the curtains and turn away from life, however, they cut themselves off from the
wellspring of their feelings and their creativity—participation in the
world.
In healthy Fours, however, the rich life of the unconscious becomes accessible
and is given shape. More than any other personality type, healthy Fours are the
bridge between the spiritual and the animal in human nature because they are
so aware of these two sides of themselves. They sense in themselves the depths
to which human beings can descend, as well as the heights to which they can be
swept up. No other personality type is as habitually aware of the potentials
and predicaments of human nature: human beings are spiritual animals occupying
an uneasy place between two orders of existence. Fours sense both sides of their
potentially conflicting natures, and they suffer intensely or are ecstatic because
of them. This is why, at their best, healthy Fours create something which can
move others deeply because they have been able to get in touch with the hidden
depths of human nature by delving deeply into their own. By doing so, they transcend
themselves, and are able to discover something universal about human nature,
fusing personal conflicts and divergent feelings into art.
But, like everyone else, most Fours do not live at the peak of their potential.
In response to anxiety, they turn inward, becoming self-conscious, particularly
about the negativity they discover in themselves. To offset their negative feelings,
they use their imaginations to make their lives more bearable. As a result, average
Fours begin to withdraw from ordinary life. They become self-absorbed and do
not learn how to relate to people or how to manage in the practical world. They
feel like outsiders, somehow flawed and different from others, unable to break
through the barrier of self-consciousness that separates them from easy commerce
with the world.
And if they are unhealthy, their negative feelings feed upon themselves because
Fours have closed themselves off from any other influences. Unhealthy Fours are
so completely alienated from others, and ironically, even from themselves, that
they despair of ever finding a way out of their excruciating self-consciousness.
They realize that their search for self has led them into a world of useless
fantasies and illusions. Understanding only too clearly what they have done to
themselves, and fearing that it is too late to do anything about it, unhealthy
Fours hate and torment themselves, turning against themselves to destroy what
they have become.
Problems with Identity
Fours find it difficult to transcend self-consciousness because just the reverse
is what they want: to become more conscious of their states and feelings so that
they can find themselves and arrive at a firm sense of identity. But as they
become more self-conscious, Fours become increasingly drawn into unresolved,
contradictory, and irrational feelings which they want to sort out before they
dare express them.
Self-discovery is an extremely important motive for Fours because they never
feel that their sense of self is strong enough to sustain their identities, particularly
if they need to assert themselves. Because their feelings change so readily,
their sense of identity is not solid, dependable, in their own hands. They feel
undefined and uncertain of themselves, as if they were a gathering cloud which
may produce something of great power or merely dissipate in the next breeze.
Fours can never tell how the next moment will affect them, so it is difficult
for them to count on themselves. Something is missing in the self, something
they cannot quite put their fingers on, but which they feel they lack nonetheless.
The difficulty is that average Fours may not know what their feelings are until
after they have expressed them personally or artistically. But if they express
all that they feel, they fear that they may reveal too much, exposing themselves
to shame or punishment. On the other hand, by not expressing their feelings,
average Fours undermine the possibility of discovering themselves by getting
caught in endless self-absorption. They become aware of being aware of themselves—their
consciousness is filled with little more than fantasies and memories, ultimately
leading to illusions, regrets, and a wasted life.
As Fours become more fearful that they cannot find a solid identity in themselves,
they begin to create one out of whatever random tendencies they find. Thus,
matters of taste, likes and dislikes, and emotional reactions become the materials
which
Fours use to construct an identity. Because their sense of self is so tenuous,
however, Fours begin to put a great deal of weight on what would be for others
relatively unimportant traits. ("I only wear black." "I listen
to Puccini, but never Wagner.") It is important to note that most of these
personal traits function by negation. Fours may not know who they are, but they
certainly believe they know who they are not. While these idiosyncrasies can
be fairly harmless in and of themselves, as Fours increasingly depend on them
to figure out who they are, they begin to paint themselves into a corner. In
the interest of maintain a narrowly defined self-image, Fours may refuse to engage
in many basic activities necessary to live their lives. ("Poets don’t
work in an office.")
As we have seen in the other types of the Feeling Triad, the Two and the Three,
much of the Four’s energy goes into maintaining a consistent self-image
which is somehow at odds with the real, essential self. Twos did this by looking
for others to respond to their goodness in ways that would make them feel lovable.
Threes kept their self-image intact by getting validation for their achievements
and giving themselves inner "pep talks." Fours do something akin to
the inner talk of the Threes in that they maintain the sense of identity through
a continuous inner dialogue and referencing of their emotional reactions. Of
course, Fours want someone to validate their self-images, too, but they are less
dependent on the affirmation of others than Twos or Threes. In fact, much of
their identity is tied to their feelings about not having the affirmation of
others. Feeling different and misunderstood is as central to the Four’s
false self-image as being only good and loving is to the Two’s or being
a totally competent "winner" is to the Three’s.
Parental Orientation
Fours are disconnected from both parents. As children, they did not identify
with either their mothers or their fathers. ("I am not like my mother; I
am not like my father.") They may have had either unhappy or solitary childhoods
as a result of their parents' marital problems, divorce, illness, or simply because
of personality conflicts within the family. In some cases, Fours may have had
relatively "normal," uneventful childhoods. Nonetheless, even with
a supportive environment, they did not see themselves reflected in either parent:
they felt that their parents did not see them as they actually were or that
what their parents conveyed to them was somehow irrelevant. Lacking definitive
role
models, Fours as children turned inward to their feelings and imaginations
as the primary sources of information about themselves from which they could
construct
their identities.
From childhood, Fours felt essentially alone in life. It seemed to them that,
for some reason they could not understand, their parents had rejected them, or
at least, that their parents did not take much interest in them. Fours therefore
felt that there must be something deeply wrong with them, that they were somehow
defective because their parents did not give them the kind of nurturing attention
which, as children, they needed. As a result, they turned to themselves to discover
who they are.
Self-knowledge became their most important goal, the means by which they hoped
to fit into the world. Fours felt that if they could discover who they are, they
would not feel so different from others in the deep, essential way that they
do. However, instead of creating themselves through introspection, Fours ironically
become trapped in self-consciousness. Their self-consciousness alienates them,
making them feel vulnerable and arouses their aggressions at themselves and others,
particularly their parents. But because they also feel powerless to express their
aggressions or to do anything about their condition, they withdraw from their
parents and from others, turning their aggressions mostly against themselves.
Because the formative relationship with their parents was primarily one of
disconnection, Fours also begin to develop a sense of ego identity based on
their difference
from others. There were few qualities in their parents that they identified
with, so Fours began to inventory all the things that they were not—all of the
ways in which they were unlike the people around them. Eventually, this sense
of difference becomes a strongly developed and defended part of their self-image
and many Fours have difficulty seeing the many ways in which they are like everyone
else. To be "ordinary" becomes a frightening prospect, since a sense
of "being unique" feels like one of the only stable building blocks
of their identity.
Their disconnect from their parents also produces a longing for the "good
parent"—the person who will see them as they truly are and validate
the self they are trying to construct. Fours usually experience this as a longing
for an ideal mate or partner. They will often project this role onto new acquaintances,
idealizing them and fantasizing about the wonderful life they will have together.
Unfortunately, as Fours get to know the person better, they become disenchanted,
realizing that the other is not the "good parent" who will rescue them
from all their problems. He or she is just another human being with flaws and
shortcomings. The other’s "blemishes" soon become the focus of
the Four’s attention, and they lose interest in the person. Before long
they are back to their search and fantasizing again, but generally with less
hope of finding the person "of their dreams."
Problems with Hostility and Despair
Like Twos and Threes, the other two personality types of the Feeling Triad, Fours
have a problem with hostility. They direct their hostility at themselves because
like the Twos and Threes, Fours have rejected their real self in favor of an
idealized self-image. However, because of their self-awareness, Fours are always
becoming conscious of all of the ways in which they are not like their idealized
self. They come to disdain many of their real qualities which they see as barriers
to becoming the self of their imagination. Angry with themselves for being defective,
Fours inhibit and punish themselves in the many ways which we will see.
Of course, Fours also experience hostility toward others. They can become enraged
if others question or dismiss their self-image or moods, but they tend to express
this by "dropping" people, suddenly and without explanation. The creativity
of Fours can also be employed in sarcastic, withering remarks directed at those
who have wounded their "sensitivities." Fours also can experience intense
hostility at the very people they have idealized. When others fail to live up
to Fours’ hopes of the "good parent," they may relive the original
pain they felt at not being able to connect with their parents, but project
this onto the new love interest. They may dramatically express the rage and
emotionality
that they could not with their own parents, but usually withdraw quickly before
the intensity of their feelings overwhelms them or does further damage to their
relationships. More often, Fours will simmer and seethe in silence.
On a deep, unconscious level Fours are hostile toward their parents because
they feel that their parents did not nurture them properly. Fours feel that
they were
not welcomed into the world; they feel out of place, unwanted—and they
are deeply enraged at their parents for doing this to them. However, their
rage at their parents is so deep that Fours cannot allow themselves to express
it.
They fear their own anger, and so withhold it, trying to come to terms with
it themselves.
As awareness of their hostility and negative feelings gradually wears them out,
average to unhealthy Fours sink ever more deeply into self-doubt, depression,
and despair. They spend most of their time searching for the courage to go on
living despite the overwhelming sense that the essential flaw in themselves is
so deep that it cannot be healed. Indeed, the feeling of hopelessness is the
current against which they must constantly swim. And if the undertow of hopelessness
is too strong, unhealthy Fours either succumb to an emotional breakdown, or commit
suicide because they despair of ever breaking free of it.
As soon as Fours devote themselves to a search for self by withdrawing from life,
they are going in the wrong direction. No matter how necessary this search may
seem to them, they must become convinced that the direct search for self is a
temptation which eventually leads to despair.
On the other hand, what makes healthy Fours healthy is not that they have freed
themselves once and for all from the turbulence of their emotions, but that they
have found a way to ride that current to some further destination. Healthy Fours
have learned to sustain their identities without exclusive reference to their
feelings. By overcoming the temptation to withdraw from life to search for themselves,
they will not only save themselves from their own destructiveness, they will
be able to bring something beautiful and good into existence. If they learn to
live this way, Fours can be among the most life-enhancing of the personality
types bringing good out of evil, hope from hopelessness, meaning from absurdity,
and saving what appeared to be lost.
|
| Trent announces
his top 10 must-see movies as of 2006 |
| 1. Fight
Club |
| 2. Sin
City |
| 3. Snatch |
| 4. The
Royal Tenenbaums |
| 5. Kill
Bill/ Kill Bill 2 |
| 6. Punch
Drunk Love |
| 7. Magnolia |
| 8. The
Doors |
| 9. Urban
Cowboy |
| 10. The
Nightmare Before Christmas |
| BLOGS |
| 12/16/06 |
| Abandoned
Rest |
| Back
At The Barn |
| Fluorescent |
| Nosedives
Above The Rest |
 |
Screenplay
Butterflies and Butt Flies is a comedy
about traveling the country in a promotional marketing
scheme.
This includes a five-pound
man, Bigfoot, divine intervention, and Kentucky Fried Chicken. |
 |
Screenplay Blood
On Your Face is a horror drama about a
brother and sister going back home for a funeral only to
find mystery, sexual taboo, family secrets and death. |
 |
Screenplay Goodie,
Goodie, Gumdrop is a family fantasy about teens,
candy, corporate takeover, competition and a wild
trip to Alaska
in search of the human-sized gumball tree. |
 |
| Screenplay The
Football is
a comedy thriller about one player, one reporter, and one goal.
. .get the football. |
 |
| Screenplay Water
Bugs is
a comedy adventure set in the late 1800s and revolvers around
two wild sisters and the search for treasures. |
|