Thessaly
I drink your milkshake.
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2009
- Messages
- 1,363
- MBTI Type
- xNFP
- Enneagram
- 3w4
I've dated a number of NTs, and they dont see relationships the same way NF's do. nuff said. If you can hang with that youre golden.
Conceptualists

I've dated a number of NTs, and they dont see relationships the same way NF's do. nuff said. If you can hang with that youre golden.
...what could be more important than one's life partner?
I am not a particularly self-sacrificing person by nature, so that just didn't occur to me. I don't really consider myself at the top, but I do consider the well-being of each member of our family as being intertwined and equal.Sorry, this isn't really directed personally at you, cafe, and I hope I don't come off as too judgmental here or anything but this line made me think about something. I've heard others express this thought before and my immediate response has been to argue with it because I've always thought that YOU are the most important. Whether you are single or in a relationship, with or without children. This is not about being selfish and having absolutely no regard to others around you, but I've always thought that by placing yourself at the top and taking good care of yourself as a person is the only way to take good care of others around you as well. Valuing yourself makes you open to valuing others. Maybe I am being too naive, idealistic and inexperienced but hearing something like this just makes me wonder every time.
Generally, if a couple is compatible, their needs aren't going to be in absolute conflict. If a partner expects their wants to be put above your needs, they probably are going to have to be cut loose.
For me, my relationship with my partner is one of the most important factors in my own happiness, so I don't really see it as separate from taking care of myself most of the time.
That is very reassuring to hear; maybe it's not NTs in general but these two NTs in particular. They were INTJs. It may not have been the personality type so much as these two individuals and their maturity/level of understanding of life and other people within that type. Or maybe they didn't love me quite so much as I thought they did.
putting work before other things is stupid imo, you work so that you can get money and live better, live more freely and have more options on what to do with your life.
Whats the point of working if you dont do the work to make your life better?
I think everything in life is finding the right balance between things. If you lean too much on the other side, youll lose the balance and fall there in that direction, going further away from other stuff..
To those who have commented that they work to live (rather than live to work), or wish they didn't have to work: If you didn't have to work, or when away from work, what would you be doing??? Now, what if you could get paid to do that? For those fortunate enough to be paid to do what they would like to be doing anyway, "work" is more than just a means to a paycheck, it is a primary source of fulfillment and outlet for creativity.
Some of the NT/NTJ commitment to work may be of this nature. It is for me, at any rate. I am not committed so much to a job as to a profession, a field of study. Pursuing this is not just earning pay, or satisfying a boss or workgroup, it is developing my talents, increasing my knowledge, and allowing me to contribute all of this to some worthwhile goal. As such, it ties in with the idea of personal development that others have mentioned.
In this way, I do put my work on a par with relationships, and higher than most relationships, because it is tantamount to my own self-fulfillment. I am honest about this, though, and tend to have friends who hold a similar perspective. In practical terms we usually strike a decent balance, though, and often make more dependable friends and SO's than apparently more kind, gentle, and attentive sorts who fail to follow through when it counts. I agree that NTs, especially NTJs, tend to be like this, and as hybrid_rainbow wrote, trying to change it is "like trying to extinguish the soul of an INTJ." Better to leave us be, and just move on, for both our sakes.
...he was more about deciding what he wanted and dragging himself over broken glass to try to make something...
An E/INTJ works to accomplish his/her vision upon the world. It's not our jobs, or even our career that we want to succeed. It's our vision.
If we put you above that, you may safely assume that you are one of the privileged few.![]()
I've been in a couple of relationships with NT men, and they ended when I realized that I would never be as important to them in the long term as their careers.
I think my NF and I are over.
It was an interesting experiment, and I'm not adverse to repeating it.
The biggest difference at the end was that I tend to operate more from what makes sense and whether or not in the big picture everything fits together and we can make things work now (and it just seems that right now is not a good time for either of us, regardless of how we feel, and any relationship now is sort of hobbled anyway, with no promise of a workable future)... whereas he was more about deciding what he wanted and dragging himself over broken glass to try to make something with lots of contradictions work if possible. Lack of love had little to do with it ending, we just approach relationships differently.
I noticed that with an FJ in my past too. I wonder how much desire/duty drives F's relationally. I always end up not feeling worthy of their passion or loyalty.
It's stuff like this that make me question being F. Relationally, I think I approach things much moreso as you describe yourself than how you describe the NF's. Perhaps it's the enneagram 5.