People who use sensing as primary are weird to me.
It's so common and weird. Always organized, always meticulous, fixed on principles which you rarely change.
THAT IS WEIRD.
Concerned with the stupid small things. Buy shampoo!! How can you not wash your teeth twice a day?! How can you not keep track of your stuff in your own house!!
I can hear them already. And it's annoying.
How can anyone be so preoccupied with shampoo...your hair will live another day if you don't wash it today. You can break your own schedule.
LOL. I agree in a sense. I'm INTP, so I totally understand your point. Sensors spend a lot of time on things that are very - trivial - to me. But, to play devil's advocate here, it is these same people that you are talking about who take good care of their home and their cars and themselves, their hair and their teeth. As I've gotten older, I've begun to see the importance of the way they see things (I'll never quite see it the way they do). The person who neglects their hair, their teeth, who doesn't get the oil changed on his car when it is due (because, well, it can wait until next week, and another week, and another week, and it NEVER gets done and the engine blows up) - that kind of "carefree" outlook often results in an older person with bad teeth, bad hair, a damaged car that needs lots of costly repairs, a home that is ready to collapse, etc. The people who tend to those things on a daily basis and who do not procrastinate the upkeep of their belongings are the ones who end up with nice things that work properly and do not need repairs.
I agree with your post about sensors. I don't think like them either. But, as someone who has occasionally not taken care of things in the past (and paid the price), I've seen some of my SJ family members reap the benefits of taking care of things on a daily basis: health, financial, being able to sell their used car for a very good price because it is in mint condition, homes that need no repairs because small repairs are made every single day/week as needed. Basically, they are the people who when they want to sell their car, it's already clean and ready to be seen by the buyer. If the buyer calls and wants to see the car, they say, "Sure, come over and look at it. It's waiting in the driveway for you." They don't have to "get it ready". The procrastinators are the ones who when someone calls and wants to see the car that is for sale, they say, "Honey, hurry up and take the car to the car wash and vaccuum it out and try to get that stain out of the carpet. Oh, and get the oil changed." After 5 years of never doing that stuff. LOL.
I think what you are talking about is mainly a J/P difference. N/S plays a role too, but I've seen SP's who don't "keep things up" as well.