Etikett: positive psychology

INFJ Florence Nightingale Personality – My Path of Empathy and Therapeutic Counseling

This post is about the INFJ Florence Nightingale Personality and how this type shows up in real life.

I am an INFJ – the Florence Nightingale type – and this is the story of how empathy, curiosity about the human mind, cold morning swims, and a lifelong calling led me to become a future therapeutic counselor.

Read this post in Swedish INFJ Florence Nightingale-typen

What Is a Jungian Personality Type?

When my work team took a Jungian personality assessment years ago, the purpose was simple: to understand how our differences made us stronger together.

The theory behind the test comes from Carl Gustav Jung, who once worked closely with Sigmund Freud.
Freud looked backward — into trauma, the unconscious, and what has hurt us.
Jung looked forward — into meaning, potential, and who we can become.

https://www.16personalities.com/infj-personality
https://www.simplypsychology.org/carl-jung.html

Jung’s model is built on four core preferences:

DimensionOptionsMy Type
EnergyIntroversion / ExtraversionI
InformationIntuition / SensingN
DecisionsFeeling / ThinkingF
StructureJudging / PerceivingJ

My result was INFJ, often called The Advocate — or the Florence Nightingale personality.

It was not a surprise.
But it gave me a moment of understanding:
“Perhaps this is how others see me.”
And there was something comforting in that.

INFJ Florence Nightingale personality focused on empathy and care

An INFJ in Real Life

Seeing the Human Beyond the Behavior

I have always been more interested in the inside of people than the outside.
Where thoughts live.
What keeps a soul standing.
What makes someone continue even when life hurts.

I have read psychology the way others read novels — seeking to understand what shapes us.

Very early in my life, my grandmother noticed it.
She taught me that every person carries gifts, even when the surface looks broken.
She always saw talent — never flaws.
And that has followed me into every meeting with another human being.

I still take morning swims — a ritual I inherited from her.
She swam in the sea, I swim in the lake.
Different waters — but the same feeling of freedom and life.

Following an Inner Compass

No matter how my workplace changed, I always worked with people.

My aunt cared for children who needed a home.
I looked up to her.
She made a difference — while the difference was still possible.
I believe the first seed of my path was planted right there.

At 24, I began working at SiS, with young people placed outside society.
That is where I discovered that conversation is my most powerful tool.
Not rules. Not threats.
But a chair, two people, and the courage to speak the truth.

Later, I worked within LSS, where safety and respect allowed people to blossom — from the inside out.

Then came the years with unaccompanied minors — trauma and hope in the same heartbeat.
One day relief.
The next day fear of being pushed into the unknown again.

Eventually, I returned to SiS.
A full circle.
So many wounded spirits, shaped by exclusion and harsh words — and still a spark of belief remained.
One day. Maybe.

When Life Knocks — Once More

The question came:
“Can you take one more child?”

My heart answered before my mind.
One more.
One last time.

I resigned from my job as a treatment pedagogue to be where I was needed the most: here at home.

Not as a job.
But as a way of living.

We Make Room Together

A Place to Land

This is not just my journey.
My family carries with me.
We make room — in our home, and in our hearts.

Here, you are allowed to arrive.
To find pieces of yourself again.
To grow in safety.
To believe again.

Consequences Are Not Punishment

Life Is a Better Teacher

Here at home, reality guides:

If you sleep too little — you get tired.
If you do not eat — you get hungry.
If you neglect relationships — they change.

Punishment is about power.
Consequences are about life.
And life teaches better than threats ever will.

A Step Further — The Power of Conversation

I am now studying to become a Certified Therapeutic Counselor.
I am putting words and methods to what I have already lived: meeting people where they are.

I am learning:

  • CBT
  • MI
  • ART
  • Low arousal approaches
  • Positive psychology and Flow
  • CFT
  • Mindfulness

But everything comes down to one thing:
The human connection.

When Methods Live in the Body

Low arousal has always been my way of responding.
To stay calm when someone else has lost theirs.
Because emotions spread — so mine must be safe.

Motivational Interviewing has been my language.
Seeing what is possible, even in chaos.

I have worked creatively with ART:
What hides behind anger?
What did you really want to say — before it came out wrong?

Morning cold water swim for mindfulness and coherence as an INFJ

And mindfulness — a way of living, here and now.
Most clearly felt in the cold water during morning swims.
A moment where my body, breath and soul are one.
Where my sense of coherence returns:
I am here.
I can do this.
I belong.

What Does a Therapeutic Counselor Do?

A therapeutic counselor

  • listens without judging
  • helps someone find their own answers
  • provides tools that work in real life
  • carries hope when needed

To understand before we change.
That is where Jung and my compass meet.

The Future

Free Training Sessions

Right now, I offer free practice sessions as part of my training.
Together we explore:

Who is steering your ship?
Is the map still yours?
Does your compass point where you want to go?

You are welcome to contact me:
carina@malix.se

Why This Path for an INFJ — The Florence Nightingale Type?

Because I have always followed the human being.
Because I believe in potential.
Because my compass has never pointed anywhere else.

What I have always been
will now become what I do.

As an INFJ Florence Nightingale Personality, I have always believed in human potential.

Carina Ikonen Nilsson

Yesterday has already settled into history.
Tomorrow waits somewhere ahead.
But right now — this is where life happens.

PERMA Model and the Body-Based Perspective in Everyday Life

In everyday life, I try to live with the PERMA model and the body-based perspective as my guides. It’s about finding balance between thought and feeling, between theory and life itself.
When the mind and body work together, well-being becomes something we don’t just think about – but truly feel.

Read this post in Swedish →PERMA-modellen och det kroppsnära perspektivet – i vardagen


A New Morning, a New Beginning

Calm morning by the lake – reflection of trees and sky, symbolising balance between body and mind in the PERMA model and the body-based perspective
En ny dag, en ny möjlighet att leva i balans mellan kropp och sinne.

A new day, a new opportunity to live in balance between body and mind.

It’s a new morning – another day in this life. A day where I get to breathe, exist, and create healing, both for myself and for others.

My coffee stands beside me, as always – one of my two daily cups. A candle is burning on the table, and one of my grandmother’s old lamps spreads its warm light. I’ve given thanks for this day and can feel gratitude move gently through my body. I got one more day – the first day of the rest of my life.

What do I want to fill it with? Is there something I need to set right, or something I can do to make this day a little richer?
Right now, I can only see one thing: the lake. Meeting my swimming sisters, diving into the cold water, and returning home to an ordinary day that still feels full.

Also read: Morning Swim and Everyday Joy – Where Stillness Begins


When Wisdom Comes from the Little One

Yesterday, my little boy said something that went straight to my heart.

“Carina, I always see you reading or working on your laptop. You study, you’ve done so many assignments – and you succeed every time. But when will you let it all sink in?”

Those words hit me hard.
When will I let it sink in?

He was right. I’ve been studying, working, doing – but rarely pausing to rest in what I’ve already achieved.
So today, I’ve decided to let the theory become something I do, not just something I know.


The PERMA Model and the Body-Based Perspective – My Inner Compass for Well-Being

Summer field at sunset with wildflowers and soft light – connection to nature and everyday mindfulness through the PERMA model and the body-based perspective.
Evening calm over the fields – the day closing in gratitude and reflection.

I let the PERMA model guide my everyday life. Perhaps I’ve followed it for years without naming it. But today, I choose to live it consciously:

  • P – Positive Emotions: Joy, gratitude, hope, and love.
  • E – Engagement: Being so absorbed in something that time disappears – that feeling of flow.
  • R – Relationships: Safe and caring connections where we give and receive warmth.
  • M – Meaning: Feeling that life has purpose, that what we do matters.
  • A – Accomplishment: Allowing ourselves to feel proud of what we’ve done – without explaining it away.

The A has always been my Achilles’ heel. I often think, “It was just easy,” instead of, “I did that well.”
But maybe growth lives exactly there – in the space where pride can exist without shame.


The Body-Based Perspective and the PERMA Model – When Theory Settles in the Body

Cold-water moment – standing in the lake with hands above the surface, fully present in body and mind, living the PERMA model and the body-based perspective.
In the water, between breath and stillness – where mind and body meet.

When the body is in balance, it confirms the path to inner calm.

For me, the model isn’t just words – I can feel it in my body.
That’s where the body-based perspective comes in: the understanding of how our autonomic nervous system (ANS) shapes our well-being.

When the body is calm, the breath soft, and the heartbeat steady, well-being becomes tangible.
It’s as if PERMA shows the way, and the body affirms the direction.

When mind and body work together, stillness, trust, and vitality appear – not as goals to reach, but as states to rest in.

Read more about Positive Psychology on Psychology Today.


Frequently Asked Questions – The PERMA Model and the Body-Based Perspective

What does PERMA actually mean?

PERMA is a model from positive psychology describing five building blocks for well-being: Positive emotions, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment.
In short – joy, presence, connection, purpose, and growth.


What is the body-based perspective?

It means that well-being doesn’t live only in the mind – it’s also in the body.
When our nervous system is balanced, when our breathing is steady and our heart calm, we feel safe, connected, and alive.


How are PERMA and the body connected?

When we practice gratitude (P), presence (E), and safe relationships (R), the body responds.
The breath deepens, the heart rate slows, and the body relaxes – which in turn strengthens our mental health.


How can I use PERMA in everyday life?

Start small.

  • Write down three things you’re grateful for (P)
  • Do something you love and lose yourself in (E)
  • Reach out to someone you care about (R)
  • Remind yourself why what you do matters (M)
  • Celebrate even the small steps (A)

Small steps create lasting change.

Also read: Self-Compassion in Everyday Life – When the Holiday Spirit Doesn’t Arrive


AHA – Between the Lines of the PERMA Model and the Body-Based Perspective

This post isn’t really just about PERMA or well-being.
It’s about letting life sink in.
About resting in what has already been built, learned, and lived.
About feeling gratitude in the body – not because we must, but because it already lives there.


Reflection

Well-being isn’t always about striving for more.
Sometimes, it’s about noticing when it’s already here.
When the breath is calm, the candle burns, the coffee smells rich, and the heart beats in time with the present moment – that’s when I’m living PERMA, without even thinking about it.


Question for You

Which part of the PERMA model feels strongest in your life right now?
Is there an area you’d like to practice more – something you long to feel deeper?

Share your thoughts in the comments – I read them all.


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Between the Lines – My Voice

It’s not the achievements that build me, but the stillness between them.
When I let the theory settle and gratitude take its place, something happens.
Life becomes not just something I think about – but something I feel.


vinterbad Ragnerudssjön

Yesterday has already settled into history, tomorrow waits in the distance. But right now – this is where life happens.
— Carina Ikonen Nilsson


Person wrapped in a towel sitting on a bench by a quiet lake on a frosty morning after a cold swim, calm air and still reflections in the water.

Living with Positive Psychology – as I See It

Living with positive psychology in everyday life is not about always being happy or pretending that everything is easy. It’s about seeing life with open eyes, meeting challenges with awareness, and choosing to focus on what truly works. Positive psychology in everyday life helps us create meaning, cultivate gratitude, and grow through both the small and the big moments of life.

Read this post in Swedish. ->Att leva med positiv psykologi – som jag ser det


What Positive Psychology Means to Me

Positive psychology isn’t about forcing happiness. For me, it’s a way of living – being present, taking responsibility for my thoughts and emotions, and understanding that life always holds both light and shadow. I may not control what happens, but I can choose how I relate to it.

By practising seeing what works and accepting what hurts, I create balance. It’s not about avoiding difficulties; it’s about finding strength through them.


PERMA – Five Elements of Well-Being

In positive psychology, there’s a concept called the PERMA model, describing five parts of well-being. I think of them as gentle reminders of what helps me feel grounded and alive.

Positive Emotions

Feeling joy and gratitude in daily life matters. It can be as simple as the smell of morning coffee, the stillness of a quiet house, or the way light finds its way through the curtains.

Engagement

When I write, paint, or swim in the lake, time disappears. I become part of the moment, completely absorbed in what I’m doing. That’s where engagement begins – in full presence.

Relationships

Relationships bring meaning to life. Meeting others with honesty, respect, and attentiveness builds trust. Real connection happens when we dare to show who we truly are.

Meaning

Meaning, to me, is living in the direction of what feels important. I find it when I can contribute, write, or connect with others in ways that feel genuine and true.

Accomplishment – to Achieve

Success doesn’t always mean doing something big. For me, it’s the quiet satisfaction of finishing what I’ve started – completing a piece of writing, a course task, or simply keeping up my morning routines. Small steps strengthen my confidence.

Not everything I begin gets finished, but when I do overcome the obstacles and reach the goal, the victory feels even greater. There’s a certain magic in completing something that once felt hard. The journey gives depth to the result, and that’s when I truly feel that I’ve succeeded – not because it’s perfect, but because I stayed with it until the end.


Gratitude and Presence in Everyday Life

Each morning begins with gratitude. I remind myself that I’ve been given a new day, that I get to drink my coffee in peace, and that I’m alive. Focusing on the small things creates a gentle foundation for the day ahead.

This morning, frost covered the ground and the grass crunched under my feet as I walked toward the lake. The air was sharp, and the water felt like glass against my skin. Yet there’s something in that cold that wakes the body completely.
When I step out of the water, the chill of the air meets me with a rush of pure life – the body tingles, awake and vibrant, as if every cell is singing. It’s a kind of addiction, the good kind, one that adds clarity, strength and joy to my days.

When I swim, no matter the season, the world slows down. The cold demands presence, the breath deepens, and silence takes over. It’s my own form of mindfulness, simple and real.

Living with positive psychology in everyday life is about choosing kindness in thought – meeting myself with compassion, even when things don’t go as planned.


Practising Every Day

I try to replace self-criticism with curiosity. When something doesn’t go as expected, I ask what it’s here to teach me.
Sometimes I succeed, sometimes I don’t – but every attempt strengthens my ability to stay grounded in myself.

Growth isn’t about being strong all the time. It’s about getting back up, forgiving myself, and continuing with trust.


Choosing My Thoughts

Positive psychology in everyday life isn’t a shortcut to happiness. It’s about awareness.
Choosing my thoughts means taking responsibility for my inner climate. I can’t control everything that happens, but I can influence how I respond.
Each time I notice something good, each time I thank life for what I have, I slowly build inner peace.


Final Words

For me, positive psychology is like building muscles in the soul.
Every time I choose a thought that lifts instead of weighs me down, strength grows from within.
Small choices. Small steps.
And in the end – a path to walk.


Question for You

How do you invite gratitude, meaning and calm into your everyday life?

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malix.se/ Carina Ikonen Nilsson

What we did yesterday leaves traces in today.
We harvest what we sow.
It reminds me that every moment counts – even the smallest ones.
Yesterday rests in history, tomorrow waits ahead,
but right here, where we stand, are the breaths, the conversations, and life itself. – Carina Ikonen Nilsson

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