Thanks!!! Anytime.
My best friend is an ENTP as well, so this post makes me especially happy
That's awsome. Though sometimes I admit I don't understand how can she like me as a friend, because I'm really don't notice details like her, and forgot her birthday twice, and this year i called two days before it by mistake, and she used to get mad at me because I never call her. Whenever she talks about her feelings and other people feelings I'm mostly thinking "wtf, i don't understand a thing you are saying", but even though I don't understand I do realise I get protective. So... I don't know how our friendshp works, but it does!
Thank you so much, I love ENTPs. They're intelligent, witty, and have the best sense of humor. I was wondering if they could potentially like us back, so I'm glad to hear the ENTP/ENFJ duo works out well. Do you feel that ENFJs are too needy though? That they invade your personal space too much?
A bit, yes. But I always thought it was because you are more normal than me

. NT usually are cold as a rock, we don't really understand people feelings in general.
I saw my friend in collage almost everyday, and she still wanted me to call her and go to visit her. But I always understood it's because she needed it. From what i got from her, I think you guys need to have someone to be there just to talk to. Specially when in a lot of stress. Therefore thanks to ENTP's ability to find the positive side of EVERYTHING, we help you laugh and feel better in momments of possible depression... even if your grandmother died, your mother is sick, and you just broke up with your boyfriend who is now literally stalking you. Hmm... now that i think about it, last year it was a really crappy year for her....
Anyway, yes. To an ENTP you might seem needy sometimes, but know that we have our little secret.... we like being needed and liked. What we really don't like is being forced to answer what we feel about something

(because we seriously don't know). At that's usually what makes us clash with feeling types who want to know what we feel instead of what we think.