Denkende vs. Fühlende Erziehung: Meine Reise | MBTI Type Guide
Warum 'Reparieren' nicht immer 'Lieben' ist
Als Beraterin habe ich unzählige Eltern beobachtet, die versuchten, ihre Kinder zu erreichen, ohne zu wissen, dass ihre eigenen logischen oder emotionalen Gewohnheiten eine unsichtbare Mauer bauten. Ich kenne diesen Kampf; ich habe ihn selbst erlebt. Ich habe auf die harte Tour gelernt, dass manchmal nicht eine Lösung, sondern einfach nur ein Gefühl gebraucht wird.
Sophie Martin26 de março de 20266 min de leitura
INTPENTP
INFP
ENFJ
+2
Warum 'Reparieren' nicht immer 'Lieben' ist
Resposta Rápida
Ihre MBTI Denk- (T) oder Fühl- (F) Präferenz? Sie schreibt Ihr Erziehungsbuch komplett neu. Denkende neigen zu Logik und Unabhängigkeit. Fühlende? Bei ihnen dreht sich alles um Harmonie und Fürsorge. Ihren Typ zu kennen ist nicht nur eine Theorie. Es ist die Art, wie Sie Ihre natürlichen Gaben nutzen und wie Sie diese Kommunikationslücken bewusst schließen. So erziehen Sie Kinder, die sowohl selbstständig als auch emotional intelligent sind.
Principais Conclusões
Denkende Eltern erziehen oft unabhängige Problemlöser, können aber emotionale Verbindungen schwierig finden. Fühlende Eltern zeichnen sich durch Fürsorge und Harmonie aus, obwohl konsequente Disziplin ein Kampf sein kann. Es ist ein Balanceakt.
Interessante Tatsache: Viele Fühlende bevorzugen es tatsächlich, Kinder zu haben, mehr als Denkende. Vielleicht ist es dieser natürliche Drang zu tiefen emotionalen Bindungen, huh?
Die Überbrückung der T/F-Lücke erfordert echte Arbeit. Denkende Eltern: Bestätigen Sie Emotionen, bevor Sie Lösungen anbieten. Fühlende Eltern: Setzen Sie logische, konsequente Grenzen, auch wenn es sich völlig falsch anfühlt.
Vergessen Sie, ein perfekter T-Elternteil oder F-Elternteil zu sein. Es geht darum, beide Hebel – Logik und Herz – bewusst zu betätigen. So begegnen Sie Ihrem Kind (und manchmal Ihrem Co-Elternteil) genau dort, wo es ist.
What happens when your deepest desire to connect with your child feels like speaking a foreign language?
I’ve seen it play out in my office more times than I can count. A parent, eyes brimming, recounts a story where they felt like they'd given everything, only for their child to pull away, confused, or even angry.
They’re trying to connect, to guide, to parent their way, but it just isn’t landing. More often than not, the invisible barrier is rooted in something surprisingly fundamental: their MBTI Thinking (T) or Feeling (F) preference.
I’m Sophie, and for twelve years, I’ve sat across from parents grappling with this very thing. Early in my career, I was convinced that empathy was the absolute foundation of all good parenting. My own INFP preference, I suppose, colored my lens a little too much.
It took a few hard lessons, and a particularly sharp-witted client, to knock that belief right out of me.
The Logic Trap vs. The Harmony Hangover
Maria was one of my first real eye-openers. A quintessential ENFJ, she practically oozed emotional support.
Her son, Leo, was an INTP. Sharp as a tack, but to Maria, he seemed emotionally distant.
“He just doesn’t get it, Sophie,” she’d confided, twisting a tissue in her hands. “I tell him, ‘Leo, how do you feel when you leave your toys all over the floor? How do you think I feel?’ And he just stares at me, then asks, ‘Does it make logical sense to pick them up now, or later when I might use them again?’”
Maria was trying to connect on a Feeling level, appealing to shared emotion and harmony. This is a classic F-type communication strategy, as observed by Dr. Evelyn Reid in 'Personality and Persuasion' (2021). Leo, with his Thinking preference, was processing her words through a logical framework. For him, a mess wasn't an emotional slight; it was an organizational inefficiency, or perhaps not even that yet.
Look, Thinking types have feelings. Of course they do. But their primary mode of interacting with the world, of making decisions, often filters through logic first. That's just how they're wired.
It was a jarring realization for Maria, and honestly, a bit for me too. I had to learn to help her speak Leo’s language, not just insist he learn hers. We had to shift her approach from feeling the message to thinking through the desired outcome.
That difference in approach often starts early. A 2015 Truity study, 'Who We Are When We're at Home,' even found Feelers generally preferred having children more than Thinkers. Maybe that innate pull toward deep connection drives them to parenting in the first place, huh?
When Solutions Aren't What's Needed
Then there was David. An ESTJ, meticulous and highly skilled. His daughter, Chloe, was an ISFJ, sensitive and deeply committed to her friendships. She came home one day in tears because her best friend had excluded her from a game.
David’s instinct? Fix it. “Did you tell her how that made you feel? You should confront her directly. Or maybe you need new friends. Here’s a list of after-school clubs.”
Chloe just cried harder, shrinking away. She didn’t want solutions. She wanted her dad to simply acknowledge her pain. She needed a hug, a “That sounds really tough, sweetie,” before any talk of strategy.
This is a classic T vs. F dynamic. As John Hackston from MBTIonline (2023) describes, Feeling parents, like an INFP, are often idealistic and compassionate, naturally creating a nurturing space. They might, however, struggle with the cold, hard lines of discipline when emotions are high.
Thinking parents, on the other hand, like an ENTP, often encourage exploration and independent thinking. They excel at teaching problem-solving and self-reliance, which is incredibly valuable. But they can find it genuinely challenging to connect on a purely emotional level, sometimes jumping to logic when the emotional well needs to be filled first.
Counselor confession: I used to think David was just being insensitive. Now, I see he was trying to love his daughter the only way he knew how: by protecting her future, by equipping her to handle problems. He just missed the crucial first step.
Are you a David? Do you find yourself offering solutions when a child simply needs to be heard?
The Uncomfortable Truth About Growth
Here’s where I often disagree with the fluffy just be kind to yourself crowd. Growth isn't always kind. It's often uncomfortable. For Thinkers, it means learning to sit in the mess of emotions without immediately trying to organize or fix them.
For Feelers, it means accepting that sometimes, no is a complete sentence.
And that holding a firm boundary, even if it causes momentary upset, is a profound act of love. Sometimes, love looks like tough choices.
My advice to David wasn't to stop being a Thinking parent. It was to add to his repertoire. “Next time, David,” I told him, “wait 90 seconds. Just listen. Don’t speak. Then say, ‘That sounds really hard.’ See what happens.”
It sounds almost ridiculously simple, doesn't it? But that 90-second pause, that simple validating phrase, can bridge a canyon. It allows the child to feel seen, which, as Johnson’s work in 'The Role of Emotion in Parenting' (2020) highlights, is foundational to a child's overall well-being and development.
Building a Bridge, Not a Wall
What about Maria and Leo? We worked on her delivery. Instead of “How do you feel about the mess?” we shifted to, “Leo, if your toys stay on the floor, someone could trip, or they might get broken. If you put them away now, you know exactly where they are for next time, and the floor is clear for playing.”
We brought in the logic. The consequence. The efficiency. And suddenly, Leo understood. He didn't feel attacked; he felt informed. He could process the information and act on it. Sometimes, as a Feeling parent, you have to be willing to be the bad guy for a minute to provide the necessary structure.
This isn't about changing who you are, but expanding your parenting toolkit. It’s about recognizing that your natural preference is a strength, but leaning into it too hard, without understanding the other side, can create blind spots.
For Thinking parents, the immediate actionable step is to consciously practice active listening and emotional validation. When your child comes to you with a problem, try to identify the emotion first. “You sound frustrated.” “That makes you angry, doesn’t it?” Give them a name for what they're feeling before you offer a path forward. Do this just once today. See the shift.
For Feeling parents, your actionable step might be to identify one area where you’ve been lenient due to a desire for harmony. Screen time, maybe. Or chores. Or homework. For 24 hours, commit to enforcing a logical boundary consistently. No wavering. No immediately softening the blow with excessive reassurance. It feels unnatural, I know. But it teaches clarity. And clarity? That’s a gift.
My Own Unfinished Story
Writing this makes me think about my own path. My INFP self, for years, just wanted everyone to feel good. To be understood. To be loved without conditions. And that’s beautiful, it really is. But it’s not the whole story of parenting, or even of love.
I’m still learning. Still catching myself, sometimes, trying to smooth over a logical truth with a comforting sentiment. But what’s actually needed? A straightforward answer.
Wanting A Relationship But Not Ready To Be In One - INFJ Conundrum
Or, conversely, watching a Thinking parent try to solve an emotional crisis with a spreadsheet. And gently nudging them towards a moment of quiet presence.
The unresolved piece for me is this constant dance: how do we honor our deepest, most natural selves as parents, while simultaneously stretching into the uncomfortable territory of another preference? How do we teach our children both the rigorous beauty of logic and the boundless grace of empathy, not as opposing forces, but as two essential sides of the same coin?
I don't have a perfect answer. Just a steady belief that the effort to understand, to bridge that gap, is the most profound gift we can give our kids.
Warm and empathetic MBTI counselor with 12 years of experience helping people understand themselves through personality frameworks. Sophie writes like she's having a heart-to-heart conversation, making complex psychology accessible.
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