Feelings. As usual.
Yeah, it takes real personal strength to deal with feelings, especially dealing with them head-on and learning from them rather than avoiding them.
It doesn't matter whether one is a "thinker" or a "feeler": it's tough for everyone.
In a similar way, I think that most extraverted functions do not have the patience to wait around for their introverted counterparts. Sort of like Amargith said. So to continue the thought...Ne doesn't have patience for Ni, Te doesn't have patience for Ti, Fe doesn't have patience for Fi, and Se doesn't have patience for Si.
Ha ha. I find this ironic and funny cause I look atbeating a dead horse as a strength...in that it's getting to the depth of the subject.
Maybe some examples of what you qualify as "not finished" looks like to you, would be more helpful in gaining perspective on this?
I think this is where I disagree. If we are talking about young INTJ's then I guess I can understand this ...but even then...it's irrelevant cause everyone projects when they're young.
Unless your saying that they do it more so than others in this young stage of life.
Or unless you're saying that they continue to do this into adulthood.
I would think that an NTJ would take someone saying "This happened because of you" as feedback. Consider it. And respond accordingly. (Now whether they think it's useful feedback or not that's another thing all on it's own. Is the latter maybe what you're talking about?)
What do their self improvement ideas have to do with then?
Interesting. Do you have examples on how they're lazy as this Mr/Mrs Fuck person you speak of?
So who is this INTJ person in your life?
Anyway.....back to the original question. Mainly because I can't be arsed reading the 11 pages I just missed and this thread has drifted into some other universe. But here's why I think a lot of people dismiss the INTJ as being arrogant, elitist etc....Note I am now using the royal 'we', make of that what you will.
We have a certain level of hubris in our convictions and state them as being non-debatable. We see no need to seek validation, confirmation, or recruit believers into our convictions before we come right out and state them. This completely ignores social convention where one would politely put forward their thoughts 'for discussion' in order to recruit a certain amount of agreement and then be allowed to hold these convictions because other's find them agreeable also.
We value expediency. Quality being completely subjective to us with no actual grounds in reality. A lot of people value external validation. INTJs don't give out prizes for participation, we care about ourselves. Others find this obviously belittling or invalidating.
We have the unnerving ability to awkwardly smile only with our mouths and not our eyes. Eye contact does not make us nervous or uncomfortable, neither does it necessarily prompt any kind of interaction. We like to observe and pass silent judgements. I've heard that comes across as judgmental.
So how do most people "spin their motives," hmm? They pretend their douchebag actions are noble, do they not? This is a feature of humanity, not of type.Yes, this is how most INTJs spin their motives; identifying with some fundamental core process that only in the most ideal contexts would be noble.
You don't get to say things like this and be taken seriously without answering chubber's question:"Getting to the depth" of a subject might matter if you're researching cancer, but most of the time with the INTJs I know, it really just means "playing the same video game for 15 hours straight," or "binge reading every issue of some arcane homoerotic furry dragon ball Z fan fiction."
It isn't a stretch to assume that anyone complaining about a particular MBTI type in exquisite detail is not describing the type as a class at all, but is using the type as a proxy for real people in their lives. Now, unlike some people, I don't fault other posters for doing this - it's perfectly natural. But in order to have a solid discussion about type, one must needs separate the concrete instances of the behavior of a specific person from the type overall.So who is this INTJ person in your life?
With INTJs, unless they can find a minion to do it for them, anything past the threshold if implementation tends to sit on the backburner forever. They will roughly 'strategize' the plan, gather all of the materials necessary to follow through with it…and just leave them in shopping bags, while they binge read every issue of some arcane homoerotic furry dragon ball Z fanfiction instead. It's like their motivation completely evaporates when it comes down to actually following through with a task, post-planning stage, and they move on to some other life-consuming bender. My INTJ room mate, for instance, had a truckload of firewood delivered to the property to dry out over the summer-- where it still sits, buried under the snow, because he never actually got around to cutting and stacking it in the garage-- which he couldn't do anyway, because the garage is a disaster; covered in panels that he stained for an end-table he was making, which simply need to be put together to be finished, which have been sitting there since august.
Um, please cite examples of types of people who are good actually being able to identify what their actual weaknesses are. Functionally, no one really understands their own weaknesses. They can point at them, perhaps, if they're self aware, but weaknesses are necessarily our shadow selves, and like the Spanish Inquisition, they strike when least expected.I'm talking mostly about Fi; accountability for the impact we have on others, and how INTJs completely ignore it. They think that because they are incapable of being affected by others, that others aught to be incapable of being affected by them-- so they feel like they should have a license to be douchebags (Te/Fi). Never mind that it irritates people. Never mind that it alienates them. Never mind that in the long run it causes them far more harm than good, because--
--they don't actually see it as anything they need to improve upon. It's hard for anyone to see the forest through the trees, I admit, but INTJs are the worst at actually being able to identify what their actual weaknesses are, and where they actually need to improve.
This is human nature, not INTJ nature.Instead, they fixate on things they think they need to improve on, which are often more unhealthy than healthy, and ignore anything else.
Now we get to the nub of it.It's that whole "my weaknesses are actually strengths you're just too stupid to understand" thing.
Ah, yes, the old "you're too ego-defensive to agree with me" schtick. If an INTJ disagrees with you, "ego-defensiveness" is the least likely reason for the disagreement.No, they're weaknesses you're too ego-defensive about to be able to see for what they are, and therefore do anything about them. So instead they focus on "improving" seemingly random aspects of their projected "image" rather than their actual core being. Consequentially, an INTJs idea of "self improvement," to use a metaphor, is a bit like a prize fighter attempting to strength train for an upcoming bout….by binge reading every issue of some arcane homoerotic furry dragon ball Z fanfiction (is this joke getting old yet?).
This is a Fi/Se thing, I think. If they don't feel like doing something, especially if there are negative sensory aspects about the task in question, they will not do it except in the most rare, pained, and grudgingly moments. They are unaffected by the thrill of comradery, so therefore can not ever be rallied to to provide on-the-spot aid when it's needed.
[MENTION=5494]Amargith[/MENTION]
Please don't stop posting your thoughts in here. As you have seen, not a single INTJ has said anything bad about them, and many of us have said that they are awesome. I, personally, have been thinking about them since you wrote them.
[MENTION=195]Jaguar[/MENTION]
Stop the projecting, dude.
You brought up some great points, and I was really looking forward to where you were steerimg the conversation, but then you went completely off the rails with some totally unnecessary tangent that had almost nothing to do with what Amargith said, and everything to do with your own issues (it was the same drum you beat all the time [which isn't necessarily a bad drum, but was completely unnecessary and unwarranted in the circumstance, which should tell you something]).
[MENTION=17495]CapLawyer[/MENTION]
I like you. But stop being such a [hostile word deleted] in this thread. Like Jaguar, you picked some innocuous sentence from Amar's post, and went off on a completely unrelated tangent that had barely anything to do with what she was saying. This is not the "Why I hate feelers" thread. It is a thread about why people tend to dislike INTJs, and Amar's posts are considered highly relevant, valuable and important by us INTJs. Stop allowing *your* issues to ruin it for the rest of us.
You like me, eh? WTF does that matter?
Not everyone hates you, not everyone hates you for the same reason, and not every suggestion for improvement is a good one. I say that to say the following: I just hope you really know when to listen, and when not to. I've asked for feedback of this sort, and sure enough the advice given (from a feeler perspective, rather than from an experienced person of the same type as me) left me up shit's creek. There was no need to do some of the stuff recommended, and the rest just made me look like a fool. Sometimes ideals are being projected (I guess anyone could do this), rather than what is actually going on in a situation and what should be done to remedy the issues that crop up.
I don't think there is any real mystery why INTJs are not liked, and Te users seem to universally benefit from reading books like How to Win Friends and Influence People and Peopleware.
Oh, and... for the love of God, don't apply what you learn to the wrong kinda person. Like, the soft feelery things that a feeler would respond to (and that you'll hear tons about) would probably make another thinker puke. Things that eventually get said like, "show them support, and give them lots of verbal affirmation that you like them, and be nice, etc, etc, etc."
You have a problem with perceivers generally because you try to impose your way, or try to start controlling everything, or are too rigid and let everything bother you. You have a problem with feelers because you seem cold and not human and can be a source of negativity. You have a problem with sensors, because you're not practical or "here and now" enough, and if you have a problem with extroverts, then it's because you're not outgoing enough. Usually you'll have more problems with the first two than the latter (for example, if you have a problem with an extrovert, then it's probably not the E, but the F or the J), and you can string together the letters to see how the problems stack up.
So how do most people "spin their motives," hmm? They pretend their douchebag actions are noble, do they not? This is a feature of humanity, not of type.
I have not found that type predicts behavior very well at all, in practice.
It isn't a stretch to assume that anyone complaining about a particular MBTI type in exquisite detail is not describing the type as a class at all, but is using the type as a proxy for real people in their lives.
Ahh, there we go. We're really talking about your room mate as a proxy for all INTJs. It's not a "for instance." (This is your spin.)
From my own experience as an INTJ, the problem isn't that we're somehow less aware than other types, but rather that roughly 99% of society is not INTJ, which means that 99% of the advice INTJs receive about what their weaknesses are, and how to improve upon them, is mostly bogus. Much of such advice is in Fe terms, or Si terms, and at best, that just teaches INTJs to put on a mask so that they don't upset others. But the mask sucks, because eventually the true self appears, and ends up repulsing others.
As a very concrete example, THIS is good advice for INTJs: The Four Agreements
Here are some examples of BAD ADVICE for INTJs (but that can be helpful for others):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTENR91f2J0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5R8DAcP59fo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TU1P2_I0iE
Now we get to the nub of it.
The weaknesses actually are strengths. They just don't look like strengths to you at the moment, because they don't serve your ends and annoy you, to boot. That doesn't mean they aren't weaknesses, but rather that there are tradeoffs.
Ah, yes, the old "you're too ego-defensive to agree with me" schtick. If an INTJ disagrees with you, "ego-defensiveness" is the least likely reason for the disagreement.
anticlimatic, my friend, you need a new room mate. Seriously.
[MENTION=20035]anticlimatic[/MENTION] - It's hilarious you think objective reality exists.
@ Amar: Once again, please continue to post your thoughts in this thread. Thanks
This is a neat little novel observation. I like it, I'm inclined to agree.
Yes, this is how most INTJs spin their motives; identifying with some fundamental core process that only in the most ideal contexts would be noble. "Getting to the depth" of a subject might matter if you're researching cancer, but most of the time with the INTJs I know, it really just means "playing the same video game for 15 hours straight," or "binge reading every issue of some arcane homoerotic furry dragon ball Z fan fiction."
With INTJs, unless they can find a minion to do it for them, anything past the threshold if implementation tends to sit on the backburner forever. They will roughly 'strategize' the plan, gather all of the materials necessary to follow through with it…and just leave them in shopping bags, while they binge read every issue of some arcane homoerotic furry dragon ball Z fanfiction instead. It's like their motivation completely evaporates when it comes down to actually following through with a task, post-planning stage, and they move on to some other life-consuming bender. My INTJ room mate, for instance, had a truckload of firewood delivered to the property to dry out over the summer-- where it still sits, buried under the snow, because he never actually got around to cutting and stacking it in the garage-- which he couldn't do anyway, because the garage is a disaster; covered in panels that he stained for an end-table he was making, which simply need to be put together to be finished, which have been sitting there since august.
I'm talking mostly about Fi; accountability for the impact we have on others, and how INTJs completely ignore it. They think that because they are incapable of being affected by others, that others aught to be incapable of being affected by them-- so they feel like they should have a license to be douchebags (Te/Fi). Never mind that it irritates people. Never mind that it alienates them. Never mind that in the long run it causes them far more harm than good, because--
--they don't actually see it as anything they need to improve upon. It's hard for anyone to see the forest through the trees, I admit, but INTJs are the worst at actually being able to identify what their actual weaknesses are, and where they actually need to improve. Instead, they fixate on things they think they need to improve on, which are often more unhealthy than healthy, and ignore anything else. It's that whole "my weaknesses are actually strengths you're just too stupid to understand" thing. No, they're weaknesses you're too ego-defensive about to be able to see for what they are, and therefore do anything about them. So instead they focus on "improving" seemingly random aspects of their projected "image" rather than their actual core being. Consequentially, an INTJs idea of "self improvement," to use a metaphor, is a bit like a prize fighter attempting to strength train for an upcoming bout….by binge reading every issue of some arcane homoerotic furry dragon ball Z fanfiction (is this joke getting old yet?).
This is a Fi/Se thing, I think. If they don't feel like doing something, especially if there are negative sensory aspects about the task in question, they will not do it except in the most rare, pained, and grudgingly moments. They are unaffected by the thrill of comradery, so therefore can not ever be rallied to to provide on-the-spot aid when it's needed.
Incoming ad hominem...
Re-spun that for you to better accommodate objective reality. You're welcome.![]()