I really love the mass effect soundtrack, that's not much of a music video though, unless its some deep commentary on Ni about staring at a static image of a video game cover while listening to electronic music
good bye
good bye
I love those @strangeling. Especially "Falling". I'm a manslut for Twin Peaks and David Lynch's work as a whole, and that song is hauntingly gorgeous. I like how it blends perfectly with the scenes in that video ahhhh
“I want the following word: splendor, splendor is fruit in all its succulence, fruit without sadness. I want vast distances. My savage intuition of myself.”
― Clarice Lispector
"All my lovers were there with me
All my past and futures"
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3M_Gg1xAHE4">
Wordless...the most Ni of all.
With nothing to do
You'd waste away
Obscured in exile
They've witnessed the times
You've gone astray
And whose fault? Now you're thinking
Ah, there's nothing to prove
A snapshot from the crowd to the shore, baby
And it feels now
Just like heaven's coming down
So strange are the ways
They all have changed
Still life, it stayed the same
A break from the past
Could make it last
Oh, maybe just a little longer
Now there's nothing to prove
A snapshot from the crowd to the shore, baby
And it feels now
Just like heaven's coming down
Your soul shakes free
As its conscience hits the ground
You surrender
Love under will
Rest assured
Baby, you're adored
And it feels now
Just like heaven's coming down
Your soul shakes free
As its conscience hits the ground
These signs, this fate
Takes a path you didn't choose
Stay strong, keep faith
There's a change that's coming through
Feels like heaven's coming down
Hold on, my love
Feels like heaven's coming down
Hold on, my love
Feels like heaven's coming down
Hold on, my love
Feels like heaven's coming down
I tried to find a song/video that was 'pure' dominant Ni+/Ne-, without any influence from judging functions; and could give a Ni+ feeling of 'floating in the eternal' while listening. This is the best I could find; I'd type this as Harmonizing Ni+ enneagram 9 sp/so. Ooof, listening to this is like smoking a joinnntttttt
There is also this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzlG28B-R8Y
And this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=If3SXJeZzMQ
And this, best experienced at volume level 11 while on acid: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1665BxujmA
all of their are extremely Ni
https://linktr.ee/tehhnicus
Jesus is King stops black magic and closes portals
self diagnosed ASD, ADHD, schizotypal/affective
Your face makes your brain and sociotype – how muscle use shapes personality
I want to care
if I was better I’d help you
if I was better you’d be better
Human Design 2/4 projector life path 1
My Ni videos are too deep for this.
Honestly no idea what Ni videos are. Some sort of historical / futuristic topic documentary?
Ni+Se
Ni+Ne
Sevdaliza gives strong beta NF demon-witch vibes.
The Barnum or Forer effect is the tendency for people to judge that general, universally valid statements about personality are actually specific descriptions of their own personalities. A "universally valid" statement is one that is true of everyone—or, more likely, nearly everyone. It is not known why people tend to make such misjudgments, but the effect has been experimentally reproduced.
The psychologist Paul Meehl named this fallacy "the P.T. Barnum effect" because Barnum built his circus and dime museum on the principle of having something for everyone. It is also called "the Forer effect" after its discoverer, the psychologist Bertram R. Forer, who modestly dubbed it "the fallacy of personal validation".
Mystical things and plot makes no sense so it must be Ni, right? Also very anti-Te, including long-ass credits for that crap made me laugh, music is fine tho.
Kills old self-image to manifest a new one. Yeah, I'm thinking Ni.
The Barnum or Forer effect is the tendency for people to judge that general, universally valid statements about personality are actually specific descriptions of their own personalities. A "universally valid" statement is one that is true of everyone—or, more likely, nearly everyone. It is not known why people tend to make such misjudgments, but the effect has been experimentally reproduced.
The psychologist Paul Meehl named this fallacy "the P.T. Barnum effect" because Barnum built his circus and dime museum on the principle of having something for everyone. It is also called "the Forer effect" after its discoverer, the psychologist Bertram R. Forer, who modestly dubbed it "the fallacy of personal validation".