Kingu Kurimuzon
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2013
- Messages
- 20,940
- MBTI Type
- I
- Enneagram
- 9w8
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
My INTP Career Journey (Success Story?) – A.J. Drenth – Medium
Thoughts?
‘Success,†for those of the INTP personality persuasion, looks starkly different from how it appears to the conventional eye. INTPs have little concern for getting rich or amassing more stuff. As enumerated in my books, The INTP and The INTP Quest, they value money only for its role in procuring certain intangibles viewed as integral to their vision of the good life. Among these intangibles are things like freedom, meaning, purpose, and truth; more freedom, more meaning, more purpose, more truth — this is how the INTP defines success.
Freedom is both a means and an end for the INTP. There is nothing INTPs abhor more than being subjected to the rules and dictates of others, as this precludes them from what they do best: paving their own path. INTPs are neither followers nor collaborators. They are self-driven individualists, deeply committed to following their own interests wherever they may lead. Indeed, having the time and freedom to pursue their own path is one of INTPs’ greatest sources of pleasure and meaning in life. Consequently, they can’t help but want to carve out more time for themselves, which they typically do through minimizing their material needs. Like the proverbial “starving artist,†many are willing to live with next to nothing if it promises more opportunity to do their own thing.
With that said, INTPs obviously need some form of income, which typically means working as an either an employee or entrepreneur. Although most INTPs despise the idea of working for someone else, in many cases, doing so is their most viable option, at least in the short term. While entrepreneurship is always a temptation for INTPs, it is not without its difficulties and drawbacks.
All INTPs dream of making money doing what they love. But before they can authentically do so, they must clarify their identity and their purpose by embarking on a quest of self-discovery. During this phase of discovery, INTPs are typically uncomfortable with the idea of monetizing their work, as the nature of their interests and identity have yet to be sufficiently clarified. They thus adopt a future-oriented mindset in which they expect that their best work (as well its financial rewards) will come later, after they have achieved greater clarity. In the meantime, they strive to carve out as much time as possible for continued exploration and reflection.
INTPs are also quite particular about the manner in which they make a living. They don’t want to sell widgets, no matter how lucrative, but to earn a living doing something that is meaningful and adds real value to the world. Consequently, it is hard to grant greater priority to any of the elements of INTPs’ vision of success and the good life; all are symbiotic and interrelated, and therefore equally essential.
While younger INTPs may lack the life experience required to articulate these matters in the above fashion, those who have exited college and entered the working world will at least have an inchoate sense of what I’m describing. Perhaps more than any other type, INTPs are quick to feel restless and dissatisfied, convinced that there is something better or more important for them to be doing. This sense of being called to something greater serves as the primary driver of their quest.
Thoughts?