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Female INTPs

Ermine

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Definitely a good thread to revive. I also posted a couple years back, and now have a significantly different view on being a female INTP. I guess it's mostly that I'm more comfortable in my own skin now, and have learned more about what it personally means to be INTP, and what it doesn't mean.

I am more feminine than I used to be. I wear dresses more than I used to, I tolerate pink (except for fuschia and bubble gum pink), I am fairly comfortable in a "girl's night out" setting. But regardless, I just am what I am, and don't feel any particular pressure to conform to a certain standard of femininity.

Another interesting issue has come up in my life concerning gender. I recently changed my major to computer science, and there are hardly any female CS majors almost as a rule. Many of my peers have questioned whether I'd be comfortable in a major where I might even be the only girl in one of my classes. I really don't get why people need to be with their own gender to feel like they belong to something. I don't see why gender matters when it's really about CS.

In any case, I discovered that one of the most empowering phrases is "I am". That way, you don't have to make excuses for something, you don't have to conform to anything, you are a beautiful unique person. That is how I am concerning gender, and personality in general. I'm not going to fret about masculine or feminine I may appear, or what typical feminine traits I might be lacking right now. I'm just satisfied with knowing that "I am". Of course, I'm not perfect, and there are plenty of ways I can improve myself, but I still am me.

It's definitely no coincidence that one of Jesus' main aliases in the Bible was "I Am".
 

IzlaRoza

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Most profiles I've read [online, at least] on INTPs come from the male perspective, as general consensus has it that women are predominantly more Fe-driven than males. Being one myself, I'd just like to ask input from other female INTPs in this forum about how being INTP affects your lifestyle and whether or not you find it hard to conform to the characteristic traits of our type while still trying to maintain the image of being properly feminine, for lack of a better term.

I, for one, am very open to learning new stuff, especially when it's something I'm passionate about. The thing is, I'm more interested in ideas and theories than application [as is so often pointed out by the INTP profiles I've read] but I find it extremely difficult to express myself because people expect me to be more enthused about stuff that are less abstract. As an added thought, I'm quite insecure when it comes to voicing out something I'm not sure I can fully commit to, for fear of failure or of losing interest, and maybe this...reservation of expression is also due to this fact as much as it is being INTP.

I guess, the main point of this post is to ask whether or not female INTPs think it hard to be both female and INTP, considering the discrepancies between the two in the context of social norms. Though this is generally targeted for the women in this forum, I'd also highly appreciate perspectives from the men. ;] [and forgive me, I know my English is a little weird, it's not my native tongue. ;s]

ETA: Ahh, I'm sorry. I think I put it in the wrong subforum. Would it be okay to ask for a mod to have this transferred to the INTP subforum instead?

It is VERY difficult for me. I too am a female INTP. I dont really have too many female friends because i find many females, especially around my age to be immature and ditzy, both characteristics i have zero tolerance for. Im only 18 and i guess its normal for girls my age to be into fashion and partying and all that nonsense but it just doesn't interest me. Usually when being introduced to someone new, they find it hard to believe that im only 18 and usually think im in my late 20's because of what they would call my "maturity", when its truthfully becuase im an INTP (and proud, if i do say so myself).

I also find it hard when in relationships. I rarely show emotions or interest in alot of things and any guy im with usually takes that as me not being into him at all. I am in a relationship now where im dating an ESFJ (which by the way or any female INTPs reading NEVER EVER even consider it... you'll be putting yourself through h3ll) I usually feel like the stereotype of how a man is in the relationship because of the lack of emotion. My guy, is very emotional and needs alot of attention and love and care, too much for being his age, in my opinion. Its draining to me. he doesn't understand the i need space part about me and takes it personal. we're always around alot of people and thats where i withdraw from society, by sitting in the corner uninvolved, because i usually feel as though im surrounded by idiots.

I have to keep quiet because i have a hard time lying and alot of people wouldn't want to hear what i have to say because its very harsh and extremely critical. And when i do voice my opinion, people will take that as me not liking them, which is not always the truth. I just have a sharp tongue.

Another thing is im not a girly girl. I hate going to a shop to get my nails and hair done. I'm able bodied to do it myself. Plus i hate being dependent on others who are only more qualified than i because they wasted their time in school for it instead of practicing and doing it on the side.
I dont keep up with the latest fashions (it would kill me to look like everyone else. to me thats like unofficial uniforms), nor do i buy name brand clothes (to me thats me paying for their promotion)
I hate parties because i hate big crowds and stupidity.

Its hard for us INTP Females.
 

Fiddling Lass

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This probably largely has something to do with being raised for the most part by an INTJ mom and being a homeschooler, but I've never really been expected to fit into the female gender role. Unless such expectations have simply flown over my head...

When I was in preschool and kindergarten, and even first grade when I wasn't being traumatised, I was friends with practically all the boys in my class, and a lot of the girls as well. I liked Pokemon and dresses and Tae Kwon Do and some other girly crap.

I keep getting less and less feminine, it seems, but being among generally more open-minded homeschoolers there is really no pressure for me to be traditionally feminine.
 

Cavallier

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I was wearing a pair of capris one time that were dark green. They were simple and comfortable with only a little bit of a flower stitched on one leg near the bottom. Some woman in a doctor's office waiting room told me unasked that she liked the flower on the leg because it gave me that touch of femininity I so badly needed. She just said it out of the blue with no lead in. We weren't chatting. I was reading and she just blurted it out.

I thought about breaking her nose but instead I settled for, "That's nice. Look, don't ever talk to me again okay?"

Sometimes society's expectations catch me by surprise.
 

Gather_Wanderer

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I keep getting less and less feminine, it seems

Female INTPs, would you say that this is a theme among you? Because I have never even met another INTP in person, I haven't been completely sure of how others of the type would act. Knowing how I think (and assuming a lot of others here have similar thought patterns) I suppose it would be tough to grow up this way as a female. Never was I the macho guy in school or anything extra-masculine, but I was generally calm, didn't show emotion, and have been told by others that I "always seemed laid back and to myself".

I don't want to have this impression of female INTPs being these cold, "butch", women...I don't really have an impression of you at all, since it's difficult to imagine a girl ...like me?
 

Fiddling Lass

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I was wearing a pair of capris one time that were dark green. They were simple and comfortable with only a little bit of a flower stitched on one leg near the bottom. Some woman in a doctor's office waiting room told me unasked that she liked the flower on the leg because it gave me that touch of femininity I so badly needed. She just said it out of the blue with no lead in. We weren't chatting. I was reading and she just blurted it out.

I thought about breaking her nose but instead I settled for, "That's nice. Look, don't ever talk to me again okay?"

Sometimes societies expectations catch me by surprise.
Wow, what a bitch. :|
 

Cavallier

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I don't want to have this impression of female INTPs being these cold, "butch", women...I don't really have an impression of you at all, since it's difficult to imagine a girl ...like me?

If you read through this thread and a few others on similar subjects you'll find that we tend to me more masculine in our thought processes. We are more practical and logical than is generally considered the norm for women. Many of us enjoy dressing up and wearing make up but at the same time rock math and chemistry not to mention hold our own in a debate.

It's important to recognize also that women are (according to society) supposed to intuitively understand emotions. We are INTPs and no matter our physiology we can still have as much trouble as the INTP guys understanding emotions. I don't know about the others but I simply could not identify with the girls who could have helped to form a sense of femininity in me. We were like aliens looking at one another. No connection.

It's been a slow process but I don't hate wearing dresses now and I attempt to dress my figure most days if I feel like it. :D
Besides, why so sad? Don't like the less feminine girl? Go find yourself an ENFP. Just don't expect us female INTPs to flutter eye lashes at you when our intellects recoil at the very idea.
 

Adymus

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The difficulty the Female INTPs faces being expected to fit into a feeling based female archetype is actually not too different than the difficulty Male INTPs face fitting into the typical masculine archetype, which is in itself a feeling based archetype as well.

The Ti dom mindset is neither feminine nor masculine, even by societies standards. Granted, men are supposed to be logical, and we have that going for us, but the typical western standard of a "Man" is also passionate, directive, assertive, gregarious, strong, and charming. Simply being logical does not cut it, in fact it is because we are so dispassionately logical that we are not even close to how Males are supposed to be.

If I were to choose a type that perfectly matches the western standard of the perfect feminine archetype, I would pick the ENFJ.

If I were to choose a type that perfectly matches the western standard of the perfect masculine archetype, I would again pick the ENFJ.

Fe decides how the society game is played, and the more Fe you have, the better at playing the culture game you tend to be.

Go find yourself and ENFP.
Unless you are a mistyped INFJ, I wouldn't recommend Feeler chicks, buttbuttmcgut.
Do you have any idea how awesome it is to be able to rest assured that when you speak to the girl you are with, she will interpret your meaning exactly as it meant to be interpreted, and not try to find some hidden slight against her or ulterior motive in you?
Well it's pretty fucking cool, I'd highly recommend the thinker ladies.
 

Gather_Wanderer

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@Cavalier: I get it. I was just curious about your own perception and what you think about how you're seen. Not that it's some mystery, but like I said, I've don't think I've met a female INTP and for a moment wondered what you were like. I wouldn't expect you to bat an eyelash and I know other women who wouldn't either. I don't believe they were INTP, so I know there have to be others out there who also don't go along with the the social norms.

@Adymus: When I first learned about MBTI and my type, I did consider using it to see if there were a type of woman I would naturally gravitate towards. On this day?...Still nothing, though I think I've dated mostly NFs and SPs. Maybe one ENTJ.. I'm pretty sure she was. I do daydream sometimes about matching up with a girl who would do exactly as you stated, and (I've mentioned this in another thread) I've recently decided that I'm going to try and be as patient as I can and see if I can find that kind of "fit" somewhere. If not, so be it. I'm tired of dating.
 

Cavallier

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Adymus said:
Do you have any idea how awesome it is to be able to rest assured that when you speak to the girl you are with, she will interpret your meaning exactly as it meant to be interpreted, and not try to find some hidden slight against her or ulterior motive in you?

This is wonderful to find in anybody. It's like a glass of water. Absolutely refreshing.
 

veronica

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INTP female here ... early 40s, stay-at-home mother, ex-editor. Amaze girlfriends when I admit I've never had a manicure or pedicure. Hate movies and any other communal situation in which someone is trying to manipulate my emotions. Hardly ever cry, except during really random times, when I'm by myself. Or after someone wins Wimbledon or the Stanley Cup or hits a walkoff home run, something like that -- but I hide it because I'm ashamed of it.

Don't like to be touched. Often fail to finish my sentences because my mind is two subjects farther ahead (drives my husband crazy :D). Spend lots of time on internet, too much. Hate summer, love winter.

I hate dancing, and large parties, especially if I don't know everyone there. Tend to buttonhole one person too long if they are interesting, even if I know it's bad manners. Don't like mingling. I do enjoy smaller get-togethers, though, and dinners, and hanging on the back porch with wine and friends that aren't too annoying. Used to see live jazz a lot, but was always embarrassed during solos and couldn't look at the musician, as it was too personal of a moment.

On flip side, I do like clothes. I shop fairly often, even though I don't need to. Hate dealing with salespeople, though, so finding deals at Marshall's is my preference. Love sports, always did. Hate most TV except for sports. I don't like science fiction, either, or video games. (Realizing that I don't really "hate" or "love" these things ... and want everyone to know that I'm just using shorthand for my preferences.)

Wanted to be a doctor, except for the part where you have to deal with lots of patients. Would also be an excellent sportswriter, except for the part where you have to actually ask questions to live people.

I'm not a recluse except when I can be. :D Kids are happy and active, I volunteer (not so much now that they're out of elementary, I can't stand the network of PTA moms -- some are good friends, most are good people, but the bunch of them together .... :phear:), I play tennis and ski, I go to church and work in the nursery, I have a successful husband and a nice house and a country club and a lot of shoes .... It all makes me very tired, though.

I just want to move to the mountains by myself. Sometimes I think I could, and it scares me. I don't feel very nurturing, but I do my best. I am lucky that my husband understands my need to be alone, and he gives me lots of space. But sometimes I think he uses it as an excuse to be lazy. It took me too long to figure that out, though, and now I'm kind of meh about our relationship. Deep down I don't think you can be in love with anyone forever and ever. But I like him a lot, and we have a great family, and it would be stupid to leave for no good reason. Family is very important to me. I'm not very good about in-laws, though; they seem to accept me like I am, luckily.

So here I sit. Nothing to complain about, really, but feeling restless and knowing that most people don't "get" INTP females, and that living in a non-INTP world saps my energy. My best friends used to be guys, but that doesn't work in the married world we live in. I miss them -- as much as I "miss" anyone (out of sight, out of mind, mostly).

I lived in Texas for a few years in college, and it was horrible. Do any of you INTP females live in the southern part of the US? I think it is probably easier to be INTP in many other places than there, you have my sympathy.

[Not sure what that was all about, except I've never done it before, and it seemed this thread was the closest place to an intellectual home. :)]
 

AlisaD

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Welcome, Veronica, I hope you'll like it here.
Do you think you'll ever run for the hills?
 

dreamoftheunknown

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INTP female astrophysicist, age 28. For the most part, I didn't get too much pressure to conform to society's archetype of a woman. My mother spent her life breaking down barriers, and I was taught to do the same. My dad pressured me a little to be more "girlie," but I think he kind of wanted me to act like a rich princess more than anything else (so, it was more about giving the impression that we had money that we really didn't have). Most of the pressure I got came from other girls in school. But to me, they always seemed to care only about stupid stuff. I liked to do science experiments and develop theories, but none of them were interested (imagine my surprise when I found out that there was actually a profession for that). After a while, I started mostly hanging out with boys because they seemed to me to have cooler toys. After a while, they started to seem too juvenile for me, so I took up reading. For the most part at school, I had maybe a couple of girl friends who were kind of like me, but eventually, most of them decided they were interested in boys and then set out to "feminize" themselves and to become popular. They couldn't be bothered with me when that happened, and I couldn't stand how shallow they had become. When I got to high school, I had more friends, but they could never understand why I didn't like parties (especially college parties) and large crowds, so I wasn't too popular for very long. I dated an ESFJ in high school (worst thing EVER for an INTP female) who constantly pestered me about not being sociable enough. He didn't get me and didn't care to. He did everything he could to get me to become what he thought a girl should be, and when I wouldn't do it, our "relationship" (because it wasn't much of one to begin with) ended. That's the worst I've ever had it from someone. After that, I went to college and grad school in a major where being an INTP is good thing even if you're a girl, so it wasn't so bad there. Where I have the most trouble is with dating. By now, even if my friends don't get me, they can at least appreciate and/or respect that what I do with myself is just how I roll, and they leave me be. Most guys that I've dated don't get it at all and don't care to. They expect me to be emotional and touchy-feely and to cater to their emotional needs (though, I find that none of them feel the need to reciprocate), but that's just not me at all. But if you're not like that, they don't want to bother with you at all. I've found that they all want basically the same kind of girl, and that's definitely NOT an INTP girl. I know that not all guys are like that, and I long to find one that will find the rationality, the logic, and the abstract part of me attractive, but in my experience, guys like that are few and far between (actually, I'm not sure I've even met one, yet). [And, in case you were wondering, NT guys are not necessarily attracted to NT women, either. I had a friend who was INTJ, and every girl he ran after was an NF type (or at least, she pretended to be one).]

I'm not really into fashion. Don't get designer shoes or purses. I think women who spend that kind of money on something that only looks marginally better (if at all, because let's face it, some of that shit is ugly) than something that isn't designer are pretty dumb. I actually hate purses, and I'm miffed that the fashion industry won't design women's pants with decent pockets. I hate make-up, as well. I'll only wear it when I'm forced. I hate going to shop for make-up because I usually need help, and the women working in the shops are usually insufferable. "You don't exfoliate?!? Gasp!" "You use WHAT for a moisturizer?!?" And they're always trying to push this expensive shit down your throat claiming that you absolutely NEED it. Reminds me of high school. Probably, these were the girls in high school I couldn't stand. The type who could only thing about how they looked. And I, too, have never had a manicure. I think the beautician would cluck, cluck, cluck at the sight of my fingernails. Despite all of this, I do have a style that I think is fairly feminine. I wear fitted jeans. I LOVE graphic tees. And I put a considerable amount of effort into making me hair look nice. [Honestly, I don't think women need to do anymore than that. Has it not occurred to anyone that perhaps women have all this trouble with their skin because of all the shit they put on it?] Even so, I have an ESFJ friend who gets on my case for periodically wearing comfortable clothes (simple jeans and T-shirt and my hair in a ponytail) when I'm just hanging out with my friends. Nevermind that she sports the same look when hanging out with the same people.

So yeah, it can be annoying to be an INTP female in this society. But if you're inclined to ignore society (which, as an INTP, you're inclined to do, anyway), it's no big deal.
 

dreamoftheunknown

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I lived in Texas for a few years in college, and it was horrible. Do any of you INTP females live in the southern part of the US? I think it is probably easier to be INTP in many other places than there, you have my sympathy.

For most of my life, I lived in the South. I lived in Texas until I was about 12 and in Louisiana until college. Then, I went back to Texas for college. I finally left the South for grad school, and I have no desire to go back (trying to get my family to leave). So, yeah. I know exactly what you mean. At least your average SJ type in New England can understand and appreciate why people might want to learn new things. In the South, they are very anti-education (anti-thinking, even). A thinking man is an aberration. A thinking woman is in danger of being branded a witch.
 

Trebuchet

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I hate make-up, as well. I'll only where it when I'm forced. I hate going to shop for make-up because I usually need help, and the women working in the shops are usually insufferable. "You don't exfoliate?!? Gasp!" "You use WHAT for a moisturizer?!?"

They do act like its a crime to use organic soap and water for hygiene. If it doesn't cost $75/bottle, it doesn't measure up. They go on about pores and so on, and don't acknowledge that nutrition from the inside has more to do with healthy skin than expensive glop on the outside. Those people drive me crazy, and I hate buying makeup for the same reason. Well put.

Meanwhile, I would bet none of them has a proper backup of their hard drive, or can tell you what products contain bisphenol-A, or knows how to repair a toilet.
 

Grove

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And I have no interest in things that usually is attached to girls: when I was little, I, unlike good little girls are said to, didn`t want to be a princess - I wanted to be a star-ship captain (or, at least, inter-galactic princess)...

You are awesome!
 

LabyrinthMind

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It used to be hard in my twenties. I absolutely hated (and still do) the pressure to be a "typical female". I explored my sexuality in the same way i explored science, for i wanted to get to know my body and its desires and pleasures. This approach often got me in trouble because nobody seemed to understand that most relationships were mere experiments for me.
I quickly lost interest in those female friends who didn't care about anything except marrying and raising kids. Of course I know more than enough about clothes and makeup and cooking but prefer to discuss less trivial issues. I am married but don't treat my husband like an idiot who can't take care of himself.
 

Jennywocky

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...I am married but don't treat my husband like an idiot who can't take care of himself.

I don't think I could deal with a husband who needed to be pampered and cared for (I already have three kids); I want a man who is capable of being independent and thus is able to give freely to an egalitarian relationship (where both of us are equal partners, even if we divvy up work in an agreed-upon way) without depencency issues.
 

mythik

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This to a T:
I usually feel bad or out of place because there is a westernized female image that I don't always fit into. I also have relationships (family and friends) who are ISFJ and it's more exacerbated there -- because of course they do the "traditional woman" thing and I'm... just not.

I have a good Fe sense and am very empathetic... but I also feel much colder than other women. I don't really oogle over babies or puppies, or have little sappy things around my cube at work, or have that same level of reaction that a large number of other women seem to have. I have some of that feeling INTERNALIZED -- I really DO find seals and puppies and babies and kids cute -- but not so much to act on it. I don't think I feel it as overwhelmingly as the generic female.

When someone is upset, I can feel bad for them, but I don't immediately want to show overt support and shower them with huggees (regardless of what emoticons I can use online!)... especially if I have mixed feelings about the situation. My instinct instead is to puzzle through the situation, ask lots of questions, and then give them a bigger picture of what might be going on, so as to help them. And if I think they are partly to blame for what is happening (or worse, I think they've done some really awful or stupid things and their mess is their own fault), I have a very hard time knowing what to do. I nurture, but not quite in the same way as the stereotypical woman; the nurturing I do, I think, is deeper and a bit more strenuous.

I also do not like to smother children, and sometimes I don't feel as attached to my kids as some moms are. On one hand, I feel like the other moms are too dependent on their children and it can annoy me; on the other hand, I wonder what is wrong with me for not feeling what THEY seem to feel. I care deeply for my kids and the other people in my life who I love, and I actually care on some level for everyone I meet (in the extent of wanting to extend goodwill to them, identify with them in some way, even if I'm at odds with them), and am open to anyone who would be open with me... I can't seem to turn that off... but I have that INTP 'autonomy' thing going and I hate to "mommy" someone as a matter of course. I want everyone to be free to be themselves and make their own decisions, and grow from their own mistakes and trials, and even when I feel sympathy for them, I still don't feel like circumventing long-term growth just to help them feel better.

I feel like other women are more attractive to men. I don't feel like I know how to make a man feel special enough to be interested in me, I feel like I'm either too smart or not gushy enough, and I'm certainly not dependent enough perhaps for a guy to feel like I need him. I might want him, and there are guys I've been interested in; but if he's not around, I'm fine without him and can live my life.

So... I don't know. I make it sound far worse than it is. I can usually get along with everyone I meet -- courtesy of Fe and Ne working together -- and I don't really know anyone who dislikes me (unless someone here wants to disprove that... :) ) but I still feel different and like I stick out because I think so much rather than emoting or doing the Enneagram Two thing all the time for people.

I'm not even sure what I am trying to say, sigh. I just wish I fit in better and found it easier to connect. And I think from the outside, other women probably don't see anything wrong with me; my angst is just internalized because I know I don't really conform to the popularized image.
 

mythik

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As a child, I was always a ninja for Halloween and in the last few years a samurai or vampire. I've never done sexy or what I consider obtuse costumes. They are always symbolic and personal :).

My husband is needier than I'm comfortable with and we are working on things. It's hard. He is an ESTJ which is a chore to deal with lately. He's so obstinate and inflexible, but still my love (for now).
 

mythik

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I have a 1 year old son and I hope that he grows into an independently wonderful person. I cloth diaper him, utilize some montessori practices at home, knit him pants/shorts and sweaters and try to create a strong learning environment that is age specific. He's been on two domestic flights so far and will be on an international flight in three weeks. I hope he appreciates other cultures and if he doesn't become what I hope, then I hope I am ok with what he becomes. Who he is right now is perfect and I was never the kind of gal that doted on babies, spent time with kids or did anything of that sort. I also wasn't worried about being a mother, I did 'research' and tapped into hidden parts of myself and there is a sense when a being is growing inside you that as an INTP you step up to the plate so to speak. I prefer to invent my own style of parenting that incorporates what I've experienced and also what I hope to experience with my child(ren). Of late I have been feeling a lacking in my role as a mom...maybe I'm not doting or mommy enough...but my son is happy....so insecure thoughts become fleeting as I chose to embrace the kind of joy in the present I can look at. It's a wonderful challenge being a parent and I highly recommend it.

Oh and online parenting communities are the bomb and keep me sane while also providing me an opportunity to go all INTP on babydom.
 

TruthSeeker

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The difficulty the Female INTPs faces being expected to fit into a feeling based female archetype is actually not too different than the difficulty Male INTPs face fitting into the typical masculine archetype, which is in itself a feeling based archetype as well.

The Ti dom mindset is neither feminine nor masculine, even by societies standards. Granted, men are supposed to be logical, and we have that going for us, but the typical western standard of a "Man" is also passionate, directive, assertive, gregarious, strong, and charming. Simply being logical does not cut it, in fact it is because we are so dispassionately logical that we are not even close to how Males are supposed to be.

Exactly. Male culture, if not always based on emotion, is certainly not based on reason. In fact, I think it is (barely) inferior to female culture, which is just as stupid but does not insist in threatening the health or lives of those who follow it.

It is a culture of unquestionable submission to the "rules of masculinity" (most of which were completely asinine and about don't's, not do's, which does not sit well with my independent and imaginative TiNe mindset). An obsession with professional sports (I am simply incapable of understanding how kicking a ball into a net is entertaining...no offense to INTPs who appreciate them), the tendency to make everything into a competition (I prefer to seek the truth), an obsession with sex (okay, I admit I love sex too, but drawing penises on every goddamned surface you can find is just not funny), taking stupid physical risks risks for some stupid chemical rush, an irrational hatred of homosexuality (being afraid that every gay man is going to rape you is not only insulting to the many decent gay men out there but is just dumb...and don't even get me started on the "lesbian double standard"...HAVE LOGICALLY CONSISTENT VIEWS GODDAMNIT!!!), none of these have anything to do with reason, and it pisses me off. Almost as much as how the people who enforce these rules then go on to claim that "every man is the same" (usually an excuse to act like a pervert) and shut up anyone who disagrees with them and/or claims they are not a "real man". Well, what the hell is a real man? How is not being one a bad thing? If he is anything like you, I don't understand why anyone would want to be him...I sure don't.

In short, I think many NT's find popular culture inane and stupid, regardless of sex. Sometimes I do wish I was an ENFJ, but at least as an INTP I get to be aware of how dumb society is and laugh at it. I suppose that's why I write satire...
 

snafupants

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male obsession with war, sports, competition, and sex can all be explained away by one thing - testosterone. case in point, women on hormone replacement therapy often gripe that they want to not think about sex all of the time; hm, this sounds like a complaint lodged against men. these women are more competitive to boot. testosterone has accelerated human evolution up to this juncture but has now become obsolete because food is readily available and mates are plentiful. note here: testosterone makes anyone fight about anything, regardless of scarcity of that resource.

the call now is for men to be more sensitive and better listeners. this, admittedly, is a noble demand, but it contradicts a mans (aggressive) physiology of "i must fix this problem". the feminists want a generational flip flop of gender roles - men more sensitive and women as more autonomous - which might take some time. does it seem both sexes would be better for the transmission of good qualities, absolutely! neither gender is tailormade for its current society and expectations. n.b., men have fifteen times more testosterone than women, on the whole - pardon the limp pun.
 

TruthSeeker

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male obsession with war, sports, competition, and sex can all be explained away by one thing - testosterone. case in point, women on hormone replacement therapy often gripe that they want to not think about sex all of the time; hm, this sounds like a complaint lodged against men. these women are more competitive to boot. testosterone has accelerated human evolution up to this juncture but has now become obsolete because food is readily available and mates are plentiful. note here: testosterone makes anyone fight about anything, regardless of scarcity of that resource.

the call now is for men to be more sensitive and better listeners. this, admittedly, is a noble demand, but it contradicts a mans (aggressive) physiology of "i must fix this problem". the feminists want a generational flip flop of gender roles - men more sensitive and women as more autonomous - which might take some time. does it seem both sexes would be better for the transmission of good qualities, absolutely! neither gender is tailormade for its current society and expectations. n.b., men have fifteen times more testosterone than women, on the whole - pardon the limp pun.

Agreed, but I am not obsessed with war, sports, or competition (I appreciate being recognized as "the best" at something, it's quite tickling to my male ego, but find competition unsettling and more of a "means to an end"). Nor do I have an "I must fix this problem" attitude to life. I don't think I'm feminine or androgynous in any way, but I still...I just don't get men. I know testosterone is the reason why they do what they do, and I don't think I have any lack of it (I'm pretty hairy, for one). So why am I the way I am? I honestly think type has something to do with it. One of my brothers is also INTP (although quite different from myself) and is "aggressive" like the average man, so this isn't absolute here, but I have met other INTP's who were similarly frustrated. Of course, I am more aggressive than the average woman, and my testosterone does influence the way I behave, but I think our Ti is very good at squelching it when our Ne fears it's about to do something "stupid".

Case in point. Do you know how many "transwomen" are computer programmers? The numbers are quite high, and we know a disproportionate number of INTP's labor in this field. I think, as a percentage, there are more INTP transwomen (certainly among those who are attracted to women, as most transwomen are in the West) than any other type. Some are even autistic, a disorder most commonly found amongst INTP's and INTJ's and caused by a "hyper-masculine brain". They, too, were probably sick of trying to fit into a gender norm that is self-destructive and irrational, and despite (let's face it) not being particularly feminine, they decided to become women to escape it. Anyone who feels the insanely strong pressure males are given (more than females) to conform to a gender while simultaneously seeing how unhealthy and stupid it is will begin to hate their masculinity, believing it forces them to embrace things they hate, find boring, demean them as people, and encourage unintelligence, which makes them susceptible to developing gender dysphoria.
 

Trebuchet

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I hope he appreciates other cultures and if he doesn't become what I hope, then I hope I am ok with what he becomes.

Hear, hear. I can say that being an INTP parent gets better over time. Every year so far has been better than the last. I can identify with most of what you posted, though I had to stop with the research because most of it was convincing me I was an inadequate parent.

If you haven't read it, Nurture Shock by Bronson and Merryman is a wonderful book for an INTP parent to read.
 

Jennywocky

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I don't think I'm feminine or androgynous in any way, but I still...I just don't get men.
I don't either, even if intellectually I can figure things out and am more traditionally masculine in how I approach problems and had to acquire a lot of the "female stuff."
I honestly think type has something to do with it.
Well, yes, and we have no idea really where type comes from... aside from maybe the Big Five which seem to have bio roots. (For example, Extroversion deals with how someone's nervous system handles stimulation.)
One of my brothers is also INTP (although quite different from myself) and is "aggressive" like the average man, so this isn't absolute here, but I have met other INTP's who were similarly frustrated. Of course, I am more aggressive than the average woman, and my testosterone does influence the way I behave, but I think our Ti is very good at squelching it when our Ne fears it's about to do something "stupid".
Typically yes. INTP guys are still guys, but definitely they are far less prone to acting impulsively. Most also are not aggressive in the traditional masculine sense, or at least not as physically aggressive -- it comes out more in the arguing of ideas, if it comes out, I think.

Case in point. Do you know how many "transwomen" are computer programmers? The numbers are quite high, and we know a disproportionate number of INTP's labor in this field. I think, as a percentage, there are more INTP transwomen (certainly among those who are attracted to women, as most transwomen are in the West) than any other type. Some are even autistic, a disorder most commonly found amongst INTP's and INTJ's and caused by a "hyper-masculine brain". They, too, were probably sick of trying to fit into a gender norm that is self-destructive and irrational, and despite (let's face it) not being particularly feminine, they decided to become women to escape it. Anyone who feels the insanely strong pressure males are given (more than females) to conform to a gender while simultaneously seeing how unhealthy and stupid it is will begin to hate their masculinity, believing it forces them to embrace things they hate, find boring, demean them as people, and encourage unintelligence, which makes them susceptible to developing gender dysphoria.

Actually, while I do agree that there are a lot of transwomen are in the IT/tech industry, I think it's very limiting to assume that social factors alone drive transition of M2F's of any type. You make it sound as if society were better, people would not be gender dysphoric... patently untrue, the feelings (and their intensity) exist regardless because body does not match self-identity.

And however you look at it, until the very recent past, transitioning from one gender to another was a bitch -- even through the 80's and into part of the 90's, it typically destroyed your family relationships as well as your career options. Only the last 5-10 years has seen a marked improvement in legal status and social acceptance for transgenders. So transitioning just because of social influences seems tenuous at best -- the social payoff usually was not equivalent to the degree of social loss. Social loss was accepted as an acceptable outcome in the process of finally feeling at home in one's body and a total congruence of self.

But definitely society does have an impact on people's ability to cope with living in a role that they do not identify with. Gender dysphoria is bad enough, but a more egalitarian social outlook can help alleviate (rather than increase) some of the stress. Since people usually don't make changes until fear of the future is overcome by the pain of present, reducing present pain might allow one to be more content in their current role. People in crushing environements have to get out sooner rather than later.

Hear, hear. I can say that being an INTP parent gets better over time. Every year so far has been better than the last. I can identify with most of what you posted, though I had to stop with the research because most of it was convincing me I was an inadequate parent.

Agreed with all that.

I find dealing with my kids as teens is extensively fulfilling. My eldest is 15 and an INTP as well, and we've been having the most amazing conversations. It's amazing to watch him unfold and embrace his mind. This is the place in their growth where I most naturally contribute myself; the early years were kind of a trudge at times.

I stopped reading parenting books years ago and have just been going on my own observations and discussions with friends and what makes sense to me.
 

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Coming from the point of view of a guy- I think all INTPs get flack about being insensitive, aloof, cold, and nonpersonal. I think the key is knowing and trying to improve little by little on our weaknesses (or at least what others may consider to be a weakness). Secondly, about relationships- I think it has more to do with finding someone with a personality that complements your own and being honest with why you see things as you do. Personally I know I found much success in thinking "how might this person recieve this?" and "can I relate it in a way that they will find less painful?" assuming that the subject is truly important enough (after weighing the possible reactions of the hearers) to even mention. Most people don't dislike when we are quiet- they dislike it when we open our mouth and verbally slice them in two.

About emotions, I find that "normal" people try to hide their emotions or dampen them in some way so as to not be seen as a raving lunatic- we already have a very solid, logical thought process as a basis for how we relate to others. Therefore (as difficult as it may seem), I would suggest to be extremely open about whatever little feelings you have and as I mentioned earlier try to weigh their possible responses with what you say before you say it- apathy is usually a wonderful thing among intellectuals, but most people respond to it very badly.

Additionally, if you find someone you are interested in I would suggest encouraging them to take a personality test and then show them your own so they can see that you aren't a complete douche- that you just see the complete truth to be positive thing you can impress upon another.
 

Lobstrich

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I interviewed at Chef school... does that make me girly? :p

Are you serious? 90% of the worlds chef's are male.. Kitchens and waitering is male dominated place..

I'm male and I'm studying to become a chef.


EDIT: I did kind of take the ":p" as a sign of you joking. Still curious as to wether or not you're actually unsure of this.
 

veronica

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Welcome, Veronica, I hope you'll like it here.
Do you think you'll ever run for the hills?

Not while the kids are home, so I have a few years to prepare if I do. ;)
 

veronica

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Agreed with all that.

I find dealing with my kids as teens is extensively fulfilling. My eldest is 15 and an INTP as well, and we've been having the most amazing conversations. It's amazing to watch him unfold and embrace his mind. This is the place in their growth where I most naturally contribute myself; the early years were kind of a trudge at times.

I stopped reading parenting books years ago and have just been going on my own observations and discussions with friends and what makes sense to me.

I did that, too. Neither of my children is an INTP, though I haven't categorized them yet. I just know they aren't quite like me. Both are probably Es, as is husband. I do have to remind myself to give more physical affection than I otherwise would, but all in all, I enjoy parenting, especially now that they are older.

Luckily they are both pretty rational, though, particularly the 7th grade daughter. The other day she said to me, "So-and-so's boyfriend broke up with her, and she's been crying for a month. I think that's stupid. Why would you want to be with someone who didn't want to be with you?" I silently thanked my lucky stars that she said that, because if she ended up a silly girl who thought otherwise, I'm not sure how I would react. I know there is more drama to come as we finish middle school and enter high school, but she and her group of friends really don't like that stuff, and they verbalize it. When things happen, as they will with girls, they confront them immediately and talk it out, always saying something like, "We don't do drama!"
 

Riiscup

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Veronica, I can relate to your post alot. Actually I can relate to many of the INTP females here. I was born and raised in the Midwest and don't know how that compares to other places because I have never lived anywhere else. I have been reading every post on this thread for the last two days and I am glad we have a thread about the INTP female experience. For the longest time I thought there had to be something wrong with me because I was definetely different from other people in general, not just other females. I majored in Psychology when I first got to college trying to figure it out. Learning I am INTP makes me feel good though. Just to know there are others like me.

I grew up liking to do things that boys did and was a total tomboy except, I liked dolls, mostly because I imagined them as real people and they acted the way I wanted them to act in my imaginary world. I used to treat my dolls like real people, dressing them up and conducting class where I was the teacher. I made them report cards, had birth certificates (thanks to the Cabbage Patch Kids), immunization records and everything. I guess that can be considered girly. I hated Barbies though and did not play with dolls the way other girls did, at least, not like girls I knew. I liked video games when Super Nintendo first came out, and like some fighting and strategy games for PS2/PS3 and can appreciate the Wii these days. I have always loved and been good at sports, though I haven't been very sporty lately.

I was always a very intelligent child I think. Was always exceptional in school. I loved math until it turned to Algebra and Calculus. I absolutely love English and Grammer and the Arts with dance being my true passion because I feel I can express myself best through movement than through words.

I am emotionally distant I guess. I have been told I was cold-hearted before. It's not that I am not emotional because I am, just not outwardly so. I am not comfortable with expressing emotions at all, but I'm getting better with it the older I get only because I found it necessary to let people know how much I love and appreciate them sometimes, granted it's a rare few that I make the effort for. Guys really didn't fuck with me much as far as being girlfriend/ boyfriend. They were always attracted to me, but were often intimidated by me for some reason, or wanted to be all hugged up or holding hands and that just wasn't me, nor was I your stereotypical girl all catering to the guy and stuff. I had many male friends though growing up because I was always as good as or better than them in sports and could easily keep up a conversation with them. Girls hated me because I guess they thought me too confident and direct, at least that was my impression. I was never a girly girl, and that is not to say that I didn't dress like one. I enjoy shopping though it takes me a long time to find the right thing because I don't do trendy and am very particular about how things fit me. I don't like tight clothes because I like to be comfortable. I don't wear makeup, except for special occasions and that is just mascara and lipstick or gloss. I hate foundation because I can feel it on my face and..... I just don't like it.


I have three children with a guy I have been with for 13 years and for the life of me I can't figure out how he tolerates me. He is quite emotionally needy in my opinion, maybe because I am not at all, but I like him alot. He is good company and makes me laugh and have orgasms which I like. I understand when Veronica says she doesn't believe that you can love someone for ever and ever and I say that because I get bored with the whole relationship sometimes and crave some variety. Really the relationship started out as one of many experiments and just went way out of control, but there's no taking it back now and since we do get along and kids are involved I think it wouldn't be good to leave.

As a mother, I would say I do the best I can. I doubt myself all the time, but I think I do okay. Sometimes I think I am terrible because I don't follow through well and am not good with maintaining routines. I over think everything and sometimes feel I am too critical only because I can't believe some of the dumb shit kids do. But I am hell bent on raising independent kids that know how to think and act based on reality. Sometimes I think I don't understand them and I feel bad about that, like emotionally I can't give them what they need, but I do touch them and hug them and I believe they know how much I love them.

I am really conscious of the fact that I overthink everything and am trying to quiet this. Like many of you, I don't like parties or going out to clubs or bars. I prefer small get togethers with good wine, good music and good conversation. I am mostly an observer by nature. I sit and observe far more than I talk or mingle unless the topic is one in which I am interested, but I think about ALOT while I am observing and like Veronica too, I mess up sometimes when talking because I have thought far ahead of what I am saying and then forget where I left off in the talking. I hate that too, because I usually really want to get my point across.

Anyway, to the question "what is it like to be female and INTP?" For me it was hard. I always felt left out, like I was missing something that everyone else was getting. Or on the flipside, like I was getting "it" and no one else did and they didn't care, and I couldn't understand how they could continue on being so dumb and oblivious. (If that makes sense)

I think I've rambled enough. I'm sure I will think of something else I wanted to say and get back on here and add some more. Good to hear from the females though.

Bye
 

Riiscup

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Oh and the whole talk about androgyny and transwomen thing got me thinking about sexuality. I can say I do have a masculine personality for the most part and have found myself attracted to both males and females although I have never acted out on the attraction to females. My mother once even asked me if I was gay, but I never considered myself that way.
 

veronica

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Wow, Riiscup, lots of similarities. Except I've never had any attraction to women. [Although when I was 8 or 9, my best friend (girl) and I used to make out in the closet. But I think that was just normal experimentation, I didn't feel anything romantic. Just curious, and there was no guy around.]

Let me ask you, and other INTP females, about romantic relationships: do you ever get jealous? have you ever been? This has been my latest self-inquiry. I've never been jealous. Ever. I literally cannot imagine being so, either. Anyway, it came up because my husband became very upset over a friendship I had with a guy ... which is fine, understandable, I have no (little) beef with it. I'm married, shouldn't do that, I know. As I said earlier, though, I miss being good friends with guys.

So, the back story is that some years ago he had a pretty serious indiscretion with a female coworker. I found out, was pissed that he lied, but then ... that was it. I don't know who she is/was, don't really care to know, am/was not jealous of her ... I know rationally that he did it because I can be inaccessible emotionally, and he needed more attention than I could give him. (I found it VERY difficult to be available when the kids were little -- emotionally, physically, all that. I gave all I had to them. I don't think that's unusual for anyone with toddlers, but when you don't have much to give in the first place, there isn't much left.)

So after he got so mad upon my doing something much less than what he did, it got me thinking, and that's actually one reason I started looking into all this personality stuff. Because after researching marriages (not going to a counselor, good god I could never go to one of those), I realized I reacted very very differently than most anyone else does after an affair. I had very little emotion. Maybe for 2 or 3 hours.

But rather than thinking that my marriage is a mess, I think maybe I'm just weird. I also think (know) that I could totally be in an open marriage. I've never said that out loud before. Anyway, I'm curious if others "like me" think that too, or if this is something different than that.
 

Yasmin

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I've never really felt a contradiction with being an INTP and a girl. I like pink, I like glitter, I wear nail polish and have a feminine voice. In appearance and superficial preferences, there's nothing that contradicts my gender stereotype.

However, I do not like babies, or children, and have absolutely no desire to create them, ever. I also have a strong dislike for those parents that do nothing but talk about their kids. I also tend to be a lot more opinionated than my female peers. I certainly do not giggle, and am not clumsy (which appears to be quite a trend these days with 15 year olds girls: thank you Twilight).

I feel the need to interject more examples of my un-feminity, or genderless qualities, but I shouldn't have to. Just because I happen to find certain girly things aesthetically appealing, has little to do with what society has done to me. I don't like pink because that what girls are supposed to like, I like for the same reason anyone would like green, or blue, or red.

It just so happens that some of those preferences may make me appear more feminine than I am. Though in all honesty, I don't understand how my favorite color, or how I dress is relevant to femininity at all. What make s a person feminine, what makes a person masculine?

I suppose I've given less consideration to how I fit within gender roles, because not many people have accused me of falling outside of me. I find much more conflict from the world for being young, or an INTP at all, than for being female. I guess I've been fortunate in that regard.

Things could certainly been worse. My appreciation for things colorful and fragrant tends to be noticed before my appreciation for ideas, and concepts, and opinions. Few people care to get me know me well enough to see the latter characteristics.
 

Riiscup

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Veronica- no, I don't get jealous. My SO also cheated on me in the very beginning and I got upset that he lied to me and just the whole way he went about it, but I would not say I was jeolous. Conversely, my SO is extremely jealous which is why I don't have any male friends (that he knows of) anymore accept one that my SO is convinced is gay. I could do open marriage too, I believe.

I did the closet thing too when I was like 8 or 9 for the same reasons, and have since found some girls extremely attractive and have become obsessed, but again, never acted on it, because well.....I'm not gay I guess.

Yasmin, I wouldn't call my being INTP and female a contradiction either. When I was 15 or so, I wasn't into babies or children either. I thought they were cute, but that was about it. And believe it or not, I never had the desire to create them either, it just happened and so I rolled with it. Just looking at me, no one can tell I am anything other than a regular old girl. It's when they talk to me for any extended period of time that they realize I am different. Not to mention all the chatter that goes on in my head that that makes me feel different.
 

Riiscup

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Question: do any of you consider yourselves sporadic? spontaneous? act on a whim, perhaps, carelessly?
 

Ermine

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Do I get jealous? Not really, not that I know of. I'm not very romantically experienced at all, so the closest thing would be when my friends start dating my crushes. But the jealousy is really fleeting, and I quickly come up with reasons not to be jealous.

And am I spontaneous? Occasionally. But it only appears spontaneous when it's just my Ne making uncommon connections.
 

veronica

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Question: do any of you consider yourselves sporadic? spontaneous? act on a whim, perhaps, carelessly?

Oh yeah, I fight this all the time. I don't always succeed, but I feel I must as a mother and all that stuff. And I wish I didn't have to fight it, you know? I guess I don't always fight it, but I recognize that I have to be some type of grownup... Mostly I just fantasize about doing crazy things. :evil:
 

veronica

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Yasmin, I wouldn't call my being INTP and female a contradiction either. When I was 15 or so, I wasn't into babies or children either. I thought they were cute, but that was about it. And believe it or not, I never had the desire to create them either, it just happened and so I rolled with it. Just looking at me, no one can tell I am anything other than a regular old girl. It's when they talk to me for any extended period of time that they realize I am different. Not to mention all the chatter that goes on in my head that that makes me feel different.

Yes, Yasmin, me too. I hardly ever babysat when I was young, didn't really care about the rugrats. But after I got married, it just seem the next logical step, and now I have two kids. That doesn't mean it will happen to you, but don't be surprised if things change a little. I'm even interested in others' kids and babies a little more than I thought I might be, especially after mine grew up. Little ones are really fascinating, when you're not 100% responsible for them and dealing with the stresses that go along with that. The stage where language acquisition speeds up is amazing... they start learning like 10 words a day, or something like that.
 

Jennywocky

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Luckily they are both pretty rational, though, particularly the 7th grade daughter. The other day she said to me, "So-and-so's boyfriend broke up with her, and she's been crying for a month. I think that's stupid. Why would you want to be with someone who didn't want to be with you?" I silently thanked my lucky stars that she said that, because if she ended up a silly girl who thought otherwise, I'm not sure how I would react. I know there is more drama to come as we finish middle school and enter high school, but she and her group of friends really don't like that stuff, and they verbalize it. When things happen, as they will with girls, they confront them immediately and talk it out, always saying something like, "We don't do drama!"

That sounds pretty much like my son, he's apt to say the same sort of things when someone does something he sees as irrational (and he thinks in those terms). And since I have more life experience and having had to deal with lots of types of people, I can say, "I know, it's crazy, isn't it? But I'm going to guess <here> is where they are coming from or why they might be acting that way." So he is getting a good well-rounded view of things... he can intuit why things might be unfolding a certain way without having to buy into it himself or having to get caught up in it, and he can stabilize the situation. (It's nice when our kids seems thoughtful and stable, isn't it?)

he is balanced in my family with my ESFP son. They are only a year apart, but hoooo booyyyyy.... talk about drama. EVERYTHING is a drama. And if it's not, he'll make it into one. That boy talks on the phone far more than my daughter does, and is in the thick of every social thing that comes along. He has stabilized a bit now, but hitting puberty he was like a bad Shapesperean actor on stage... yelling, crying, slamming doors, turning something as slight as a funny look at the dinner table into a personal murderous offense of universal proportion.

But maybe this is INTP parenting at core: Life is a testing ground and a learning experience. So my elder son learned to deal with drama hounds, and my younger son has learned to chill a bit and think through things rather than just reacting all the time. I think that is what makes life interesting.

Yes, Yasmin, me too. I hardly ever babysat when I was young, didn't really care about the rugrats. But after I got married, it just seem the next logical step, and now I have two kids. That doesn't mean it will happen to you, but don't be surprised if things change a little. I'm even interested in others' kids and babies a little more than I thought I might be, especially after mine grew up. Little ones are really fascinating, when you're not 100% responsible for them and dealing with the stresses that go along with that. The stage where language acquisition speeds up is amazing... they start learning like 10 words a day, or something like that.

I remember being terrified of kids (although I always liked to observe them, out of curiosity) before I had any. I was afraid and didn't know how to respond. So much of the interaction with young children is not adult-cerebral, it's got to take place on other foundations, and I was uncomfortable with the idea and thought I would be a failure.

Language acquisition IS amazing. My eldest was using qualifiers at the age of 2.5 in his speech and it both amazed and amused me. ("I especially hope that we could possibly do this today" or "I don't particularly want to watch that," were the sorts of things that would come out of that tiny little high-pitched child's voice.) Don't ask me how the kids figure this out at such a young age, but they just soak it up.

Question: do any of you consider yourselves sporadic? spontaneous? act on a whim, perhaps, carelessly?

I do moreso nowadays... but I'm in my 40's and had a large portion of my life before then where, despite being intellectually flexible, in terms of how I lived my life everything was thought to death ahead of time and I was scared to be spontaneous and instinctive. I did not want to make any unfixable mistakes or do anything stupid or look impulsive.

But now that I guess I've gotten a good feel in life about what sort of risks are involved in different situations, and because I also know how unhappy I was when forcing myself to not be spontaneous at all, I allow myself some flexibility in the moment to just do whatever.

Yasmin said:
I feel the need to interject more examples of my un-feminity, or genderless qualities, but I shouldn't have to. Just because I happen to find certain girly things aesthetically appealing, has little to do with what society has done to me. I don't like pink because that what girls are supposed to like, I like for the same reason anyone would like green, or blue, or red.

That sort of thinking seems typical. I'm "indifferent" to social standards, rather than for or against them. I happen to be more femme in my daily appearance, but it's not to fit a social standard, it's because I like who I am and that's who I am... yet I'm also one who is not afraid to get her hands dirty (i.e., I am not prissy). Small example: Right now I wear acrylic nails because I like it and didn't do it for much of my life, so it is kind of fun to try something new... yet if I ever get involved regularly in playing piano again with groups, I'm going to stop for pragmatic reasons. I also often wear skirts or even dresses to work without it bothering me, I enjoy dressing up sometimes -- but when I'm home I'll typically be in whatever clothes are most convenient at the time to my task. I'll do whatever seems to make the most sense, rather than being hooked on fitting a particular image or ideal. I am in charge of who I am, rather than society, and I can do whatever I want that makes sense or is an extention of my self-identity.

Riiscup said:
I grew up liking to do things that boys did and was a total tomboy except, I liked dolls, mostly because I imagined them as real people and they acted the way I wanted them to act in my imaginary world. I used to treat my dolls like real people, dressing them up and conducting class where I was the teacher. I made them report cards, had birth certificates (thanks to the Cabbage Patch Kids), immunization records and everything. I guess that can be considered girly. I hated Barbies though and did not play with dolls the way other girls did, at least, not like girls I knew. I liked video games when Super Nintendo first came out, and like some fighting and strategy games for PS2/PS3 and can appreciate the Wii these days. I have always loved and been good at sports, though I haven't been very sporty lately.

I've always loved video games too (and still play them -- a girlfriend and I actually were at an amusement park last week together and we ended up playing Golden Axe in the arcade together...lol! She did not want to take me on Street Fighter II, though.) Never was into Barbies much either, although I had lots of Star Wars figures I played with.

I was always a very intelligent child I think. Was always exceptional in school. I loved math until it turned to Algebra and Calculus. I absolutely love English and Grammer and the Arts with dance being my true passion because I feel I can express myself best through movement than through words.

I think that is very cool. For me, my experience was that I always "lived in my head" and felt very uncomfortable within my body. It has been a revelation for me in recent life to actually exist within my body, feel it to be an extension of who I am (rather than some sort of puppet or fleshsuit my mind puts on so it can interact in the world), become far more expressive of who I am emotionally and otherwise. I think dance (and martial arts and other physical oriented skills) are just amazing, and I can sit and watch them for a long time.
 

Jennywocky

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Wow, Riiscup, lots of similarities. Except I've never had any attraction to women. [Although when I was 8 or 9, my best friend (girl) and I used to make out in the closet. But I think that was just normal experimentation, I didn't feel anything romantic. Just curious, and there was no guy around.]

As an adult, I actually tried -- because I'm open to things, I need to explore them to "know" what is true about myself rather than going by status quo -- but it just didn't work for me. I love my female friends and can have intimate conversations and feel connected, but there's nothing romantic about the relationships.

Like you said, curiosity is what drives me. i want to understand how the world works. And so I do not naturally put up boundaries to prevent that exploration... except for those based on risk. (i.e., could I die? Get hurt? lose my job? What cost/risk am I willing to accept to learn something?)

Let me ask you, and other INTP females, about romantic relationships: do you ever get jealous? have you ever been? This has been my latest self-inquiry. I've never been jealous. Ever. I literally cannot imagine being so, either.

I typically do not get jealous. I can feel hurt or abandoned, but it typically never goes to jealousy. I feel so strongly about personal autonomy that i think everyone needs to make their own decisions about life, and this includes who one is with. I don't see it as rational to stick with a guy who is cheating or who is not dedicated to a relationship with me, but I don't break up "out of jealousy" -- just more because I know the relationship can't work nor is it what I want and need.

I do remember when my best friend from college got married. We were close, and now I felt that our friendship was going to change since marriage becomes a primary commitment for people, so the time we got to spend together would change and priorities would change... and I mourned that... but I never really felt jealousy over it. People are free to do what they want, them and me, and I need to just be fair and rational and adjust to deal with change.

Jealousy actually annoys me. I dumped my first crush (in high school) because of jealousy -- it had been increasing if we weren't attached at the hip all the time, and one day i went to the movies with two other people (a male and a female friend), and when we talked later that night and I mentioned it, I got read the riot act. I had not planned to break up, but I heard myself saying the words; I was just tired of the jealousy and attempts to control me when I hadn't done anything wrong.

Anyway, it came up because my husband became very upset over a friendship I had with a guy ... which is fine, understandable, I have no (little) beef with it. I'm married, shouldn't do that, I know. As I said earlier, though, I miss being good friends with guys.

Yeah. I've had a few close guy friends who, when they got married, our friendship cooled down. One is religious and so he felt he couldn't be around me without risk of temptation; I know nothing would have happened, but I wanted him to be happy in his marriage and respect his beliefs, so....

So, the back story is that some years ago he had a pretty serious indiscretion with a female coworker. I found out, was pissed that he lied, but then ... that was it. I don't know who she is/was, don't really care to know, am/was not jealous of her ... I know rationally that he did it because I can be inaccessible emotionally, and he needed more attention than I could give him. (I found it VERY difficult to be available when the kids were little -- emotionally, physically, all that. I gave all I had to them. I don't think that's unusual for anyone with toddlers, but when you don't have much to give in the first place, there isn't much left.)

Yes, that's a typical problem in young marriages when kids enter the picture. The kids naturally become a HUGE energy drain, they need the attention both emotionally and physically, and even if we want to be more connected to spouse, there's just no energy for it. Sleep is lacking, rest is lacking, everything becomes so scheduled for awhile. I have seen guys complain about that a lot, about the change in the relationship, of feeling second-fiddle, of declining sex lives, etc. But it is just a reality of having children, especially if the father is still working full-time and the mother is the one handling most of the kid/house chores.

So after he got so mad upon my doing something much less than what he did, it got me thinking, and that's actually one reason I started looking into all this personality stuff. Because after researching marriages (not going to a counselor, good god I could never go to one of those), I realized I reacted very very differently than most anyone else does after an affair. I had very little emotion. Maybe for 2 or 3 hours.

But rather than thinking that my marriage is a mess, I think maybe I'm just weird. I also think (know) that I could totally be in an open marriage. I've never said that out loud before. Anyway, I'm curious if others "like me" think that too, or if this is something different than that.

I found marriage counseling to mostly suck. There was nothing that really got said that I didn't know. It was more about just having a mediator so that we "could talk" -- since sometimes if it's just the two of you, actual discourse starts to dwindle and people can dig into their positions and things get stuck in a rut.

I don't know if I could do an open marriage. I have never tried it, so I'm not sure of the dynamics. I guess rationally I just don't know if people can maintain the openness -- we tend to start become exclusive by nature, or at least one partner would -- and this would create a decline in the original relationship. I like knowing that someone is part of my life and vice versa, it removes some of the ambiguity so I can focus on other things.

... but... I don't care to judge those who try open marriage, and I'm pretty open to new things within a relationship. Regardless of whether society would frown on it. For me, everything has to be taken on its own merits.

So no, I do not think you're weird -- not unless all of us here are weird. All the stuff in this thread is what I would expect INTPs (and INTP women) to say; we're rational, we're not hung up on social convention, we like to explore and figure things out for ourselves, we're mostly fearless, we're not possesive or domineering, we care about people but in a more "thought out" way. I guess maybe that makes us different the culture we are in, though...
 

veronica

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I found marriage counseling to mostly suck. There was nothing that really got said that I didn't know.

Yes, pretty much what I think of all counseling. I wonder if that's an INTP trait. I can figure this out on my own ... sort of an intellectual arrogance. But I know from discussions with my friends who've been through years (and thousands of dollars) of counseling that I can pretty much nail the issue immediately, and if not immediately, it doesn't take long. (Hmmm, maybe I should be a counselor, ha ha -- but I wouldn't have enough repeat business.) I find it laughable that they spent so much time and money on it -- but then again I know I'm constantly ruminating, whereas others aren't, thus need both a catalyst and an outlet for such things. I just have conversations with myself. It's much cheaper, and far less time consuming. :-)

I don't know if I could do an open marriage. I have never tried it, so I'm not sure of the dynamics. I guess rationally I just don't know if people can maintain the openness -- we tend to start become exclusive by nature, or at least one partner would -- and this would create a decline in the original relationship. I like knowing that someone is part of my life and vice versa, it removes some of the ambiguity so I can focus on other things.

True, and there are all sorts of practical reasons that it would be difficult if not impossible. But emotionally, I could do it.

So no, I do not think you're weird -- not unless all of us here are weird. All the stuff in this thread is what I would expect INTPs (and INTP women) to say; we're rational, we're not hung up on social convention, we like to explore and figure things out for ourselves, we're mostly fearless, we're not possesive or domineering, we care about people but in a more "thought out" way. I guess maybe that makes us different the culture we are in, though...

Exactly ... when I was a teenager, my mother gave me a bumper sticker that said, "I'm not weird, you are." I was lucky that she "got" me; she wasn't INTP, probably ISTJ, but she understood who I was and didn't force me to be anyone else.

And I am really not so unconventional from the outside, you have to get to know me before you know that. Nor am I anti-convention for the sake of being unconventional, as some are. Many conventions are that way because they make a lot of sense ... I am actually somewhat conservative in some ways, the ways that I find make sense (and probably those that became conventions because they made sense). Take the nuclear family and marriage: I am sort of chafing at it right now, but I also see that being legally married is keeping me from doing some things that I shouldn't do but that I kind of want to do. I do believe that the arrangement of marriage and children for a family is (at its best) the most beneficial for raising the children. I think kids need a stable environment where they feel safe in order for them to become rational, independent adults, and that is really the goal, no? So I have no problem subsuming my own desires and instincts for that purpose.

(I probably don't have to say it here, but that in no way means I think a nuclear family is the only way to raise good kids, or that bad kids can't come out of a stable family, or that in general functional families can't be made up of an infinite number of combinations. There are many paths ... but if it's possible, I think the one with the fewest land mines is this one.)
 

mythik

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I haven't caught up, but wanted to add that I did run for the hills a few years ago. I moved cross country with my dogs in tow, stayed at a hotel, found a casita on a few acres, moved in, found a job and hibernated for six months near a river amongst hills outside of a very small city. I came from the NE (NYC) and like extreme changes so it fit for a while. I would have been happier had I been retired and lived in the real mountains or on the ocean. It was an overall very good experience....I went to work, went home then hiked with my dogs all evening, drew 'art' and read. Lovely.

I did something like this again but off grid a few years later living in a 15'(?) train caboose with an ex. It was awesome. I miss the coyotes howling and my solar shower.
 

Riiscup

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Okay, I hope I can remember everything I want to respond to. I would be quoting all day so let me see.....

Veronica, we are in the same circle on the sporadic, spontaneous thing. I fight it too and for the same reasons as you. I definetely fantasize about doing crazy stuff and can see myself slipping up when the kids grow up...and liking it! It's not good fighting it though sometimes for me because I feel like I have to release occasionally and can get into some crazy situations that I can never emotionally rise to. Curiosity definetely drives me, sometimes in what are considered not so good directions, but of course I have to experience for myself why. Again, this was more of a problem when I was younger -not so much now.

Jennywocky, the whole "thinking of everything ahead of time" and "scared to be spontaneous and instinctive" was soooooooo me, but it was more me when I was younger, and the older I get, the more I just let go because I felt like I was missing out on a lot of experiences. Sometimes I would figure one thing was likely to happen in a given situation and decide not to do it and things would go in a total opposite direction that I would have liked to have been apart of. So, these days I actively try not to "live in my head" as someone here put it. I want to exist in my body. I want to experience, first hand, as much as I can things that there is no logical reason not to try (the risks you spoke of). As a sidebar, one problem I had with dance was choreographing my own pieces. I could take someone else's choreography and tear it up, but could never create my own pieces, I hated that.

Oh and yes, little ones are more interesting when they are not yours, meaning you can send them away when you no longer have the energy for them. I think the biggest issue for me as a mom is having to pull out of my head, just when a thought is getting good, to attend to children. My kids are younger. 2, 8, 11. My daughter is in that cool language acquisition phase that is totally different for her than it was with my boys. She is so intelligent, she thinks pretty well for 2 - I think- and says the darndest things. I think my 8 year old is INTP, because he is exactly how I was at his age accept he's a boy, very very smart child. My 11 year old and I are really getting each other these days though I suspect he is going into puberty because he gets so emotional sometimes for nothing. But some of the things he talks about to me really impress me, I suspect he is my artistic child, and he is impressive in social situations - he got that from his dad. I enjoy him more and more and learn more and more about him with each passing year. It's fun!

Jenny, I like Street Fighter too. I really loved the Soul Calibur's. I never really got into Star Wars figures, but I loved transformers. Particularly, ones that transformed into more than one thing.

I also don't believe it rational to stick with a guy who is cheating because obviously, I must not be what he's looking for. My SO's indiscretion was at the beginning of our relationship with his ex that he had been with for some years. I could kind of understand it, I just didn't appreciate the deceit around it. I do however think I could pull off and open marriage though. In a committed relationship, you are together for many reasons, and particularly because you enjoy each other. I view open marriage as a marriage that allows sex or dating with people outside of the marriage. Sex and relationship is two different things for me. I could, back in the day, have sex with someone and not in the least want a relationship with them. I think I have found in my SO, someone I would like to always have in my life. As much as he gets on my nerves and I don't understand how he tolerates me, he also makes me happy. I truly enjoy him. And I may be able to hang out with other guys and even have sex with them and still believe that my current SO is the one that I want to be with for the long term. It would be a variety thing for me. Of course, I don't know this for absolute sure, because I don't have an open relationship, but in thinking of it, these are my thoughts. Emotionally, I truly think I could do it. And if the relationship ends, it was meant to anyway, so I take the good times and good lessons and keep on moving. (I know grammatically this is a mess, but I am not going to bother with it because I don't feel like it, I hope you all understand my rambling though) I also feel that the nuclear family (at its best) is good for the children and I want to do what is best for my kids, always, and have no problems accomodating them.

Again, I'll probably post something else if I think of something else I wanted to say, but I will end here.
 

veronica

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I haven't caught up, but wanted to add that I did run for the hills a few years ago. I moved cross country with my dogs in tow, stayed at a hotel, found a casita on a few acres, moved in, found a job and hibernated for six months near a river amongst hills outside of a very small city. I came from the NE (NYC) and like extreme changes so it fit for a while. I would have been happier had I been retired and lived in the real mountains or on the ocean. It was an overall very good experience....I went to work, went home then hiked with my dogs all evening, drew 'art' and read. Lovely.

I did something like this again but off grid a few years later living in a 15'(?) train caboose with an ex. It was awesome. I miss the coyotes howling and my solar shower.

One of my best friends in college asked me what I thought I would be doing when I grew up. I was probably about 19 or 20 at the time, English major, no real plans for post-graduation. The thing that occurred was, "I'll move to the Colorado mountains, raise big dogs, write books, and ski." What you did sounds a lot like what I yearned for more than 20 years ago! And I'm not even sure I yearned for it ... it's just the first thing that came to mind.

So, after graduation (from CU Boulder), I was going to move up to Vail and teach skiing for a while. But my father received a temporary assignment in Washington DC and invited me to go along with him, and I thought, Hmmm, that sounds interesting. I planned on going for a few months, and ended up staying 8 years. It was very interesting, and I'm glad I lived there, but I really think it changed the course of my life. (Well, obviously it did.) I did make it back to Colorado, 10 years later, but with two kids and a husband in tow.
 

Jennywocky

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Yes, pretty much what I think of all counseling. I wonder if that's an INTP trait.

Well, I never went to personal therapy until my 30's because I saw it as a "waste." When I finally did go, I benefited -- but not from being told things I didn't know but by having an environment in which I could just be myself, be human, without fear of judgment or my compulsive self-restraint

The one or two times we tried marriage therapy, it was awful. We came to the first guy (who was highly touted to us by friends) with realistic problems, and he tried to quote Jung to us and gave us nothing of substance nor seemed to understand our problems. The other issue is that my spouse wanted a religious counselor and I didn't. It's kind of hard to go through therapy when the spouses don't agree on what needs to happen in therapy.

My eldest (INTP) went to therapy once or twice (when he was 13) and then said he was done, because it was "stupid" and the guy was not telling him anything new and/or useful. It was funny... exactly what I would expect an INTP to say.

I can figure this out on my own ... sort of an intellectual arrogance. But I know from discussions with my friends who've been through years (and thousands of dollars) of counseling that I can pretty much nail the issue immediately, and if not immediately, it doesn't take long. (Hmmm, maybe I should be a counselor, ha ha -- but I wouldn't have enough repeat business.) I find it laughable that they spent so much time and money on it -- but then again I know I'm constantly ruminating, whereas others aren't, thus need both a catalyst and an outlet for such things. I just have conversations with myself. It's much cheaper, and far less time consuming. :-)

Totally. That's the thing -- we are well-suited to detach and try to review our situaton as objectively as we can, although we're still human and can't do it perfectly. In life it has been a wake-up call to realize that many other people just can't do this -- which helps me realize that this is a strength I can use for myself and others, and also helps me forgive them for not being so introspective. Lord knows it meant my socializing skills were defunct for many years since I primarily was an introspecter.

My younger two children benefited from some therapy. (Bckgrnd: When my spouse and I separated, we took our kids to see therapists to help them adjust to it.) My ESFP kid loved it -- the insights were helpful to him, and the guy let him talk almost the entire time, and there is nothing more my son likes to do than talk and have people listen.

My INFJ daughter did play therapy, because she's very protective of her emotions and has trouble discussing them directly. Again, it was helpful.

But "therapy as vehicle for knowledge" for INTPs seems to be a waste of time. I think it mostly provides for us at best an affirming environment where we can explore other parts of ourselves besides our ability to perceive truths and put together a coherent big picture of our lives, since we already do that normally.

True, and there are all sorts of practical reasons that it would be difficult if not impossible. But emotionally, I could do it.

Yeah. I know what you mean. I'm capable of having sex with someone I know and care about, without being in an LTR with them or feeling guilt over it. It's more the complications (relationally) that mess things up.

Exactly ... when I was a teenager, my mother gave me a bumper sticker that said, "I'm not weird, you are." I was lucky that she "got" me; she wasn't INTP, probably ISTJ, but she understood who I was and didn't force me to be anyone else.

You are really lucky, and I'm glad for you. I feel like I never got to be myself until my late 30's because I was trying (tacitly or overtly) to please the entire rest of my family and not bring tension down on my head; even now, my parents STILL don't get me. I'm finding myself strangely broken up about that, although intellectually I totally see it and thought I could come to terms with it; I guess the desire to just have parents understand and accept one as who one is, is just a very big deal. I've had to look elsewhere for self-affirmation and very much align with the "Friends are one's family of choice" scenario because my bio-family just has no clue who I am, despite so many attempts on my part to connect. Kind of sad.

Many conventions are that way because they make a lot of sense ... I am actually somewhat conservative in some ways, the ways that I find make sense (and probably those that became conventions because they made sense). Take the nuclear family and marriage: I am sort of chafing at it right now, but I also see that being legally married is keeping me from doing some things that I shouldn't do but that I kind of want to do. I do believe that the arrangement of marriage and children for a family is (at its best) the most beneficial for raising the children. I think kids need a stable environment where they feel safe in order for them to become rational, independent adults, and that is really the goal, no? So I have no problem subsuming my own desires and instincts for that purpose.

Totally. I have the same sort of "rational" approach to everything that you do, including the nuclear family. And when we separated, our primary concern was keeping the kids stable, and I've had to take some painful things on my back because of that, but I can't help but rationally think through it and do what pragmatically is the best long-term regardless of my feelings. I also see some degree of value in social customs, which aren't always arbitrary but often developed in order to meet a particular realistic need in life. So I support things that happen to align with status quo, if I think they make sense and serve a purpose.

(I probably don't have to say it here, but that in no way means I think a nuclear family is the only way to raise good kids, or that bad kids can't come out of a stable family, or that in general functional families can't be made up of an infinite number of combinations. There are many paths ... but if it's possible, I think the one with the fewest land mines is this one.)

Totally. I think the ideal is giving kids a stable environment.

But like you say, good kids can come out of any environment. And for me, my family was horribly unstable (my father was and is an incorrigible alcoholic and I have some terrible stories about him and my doormat mother); and I've got baggage because of it that I had to work for years to get through, yet I consider myself "successful" in that I am not broken like my parents, I'm resilient and a survivor, and I always kept my head about me and didn't get sucked into a host of potential dangers that I might have been with other kids in my situation (I've managed to break out of a large degree from the negative patterns my parents live in), and I've managed to raise three stable, healthy, self-confident, sensitive kids.

I haven't caught up, but wanted to add that I did run for the hills a few years ago. I moved cross country with my dogs in tow, stayed at a hotel, found a casita on a few acres, moved in, found a job and hibernated for six months near a river amongst hills outside of a very small city. I came from the NE (NYC) and like extreme changes so it fit for a while. I would have been happier had I been retired and lived in the real mountains or on the ocean. It was an overall very good experience....I went to work, went home then hiked with my dogs all evening, drew 'art' and read. Lovely. I did something like this again but off grid a few years later living in a 15'(?) train caboose with an ex. It was awesome. I miss the coyotes howling and my solar shower.

It does sound very awesome.

And even now, when I feel I fit better into society, sometimes I secretly wish I could just move to a cabin deep in the northern woods and just live there alone, spending my days wandering or writing or reading or whatever, and not have to think about any of these other things that modern culture has foisted on us. (Although I do enjoy my electricity and hot showers!)

riiscup said:
Jennywocky, the whole "thinking of everything ahead of time" and "scared to be spontaneous and instinctive" was soooooooo me, but it was more me when I was younger, and the older I get, the more I just let go because I felt like I was missing out on a lot of experiences. Sometimes I would figure one thing was likely to happen in a given situation and decide not to do it and things would go in a total opposite direction that I would have liked to have been apart of. So, these days I actively try not to "live in my head" as someone here put it. I want to exist in my body. I want to experience, first hand, as much as I can things that there is no logical reason not to try (the risks you spoke of).

Yeah, that is exactly what I have had to try to do with my life nowadays. And honestly, I love it -- I feel like I'm finally *alive* than just cogitating about life. The moments seem magical sometimes, it's that much of a difference from how I used to live. If there is anything I regret, it is about being too detached when younger and letting too much of my life not be spontaneous, of not living more in the moment.

As a sidebar, one problem I had with dance was choreographing my own pieces. I could take someone else's choreography and tear it up, but could never create my own pieces, I hated that.

Yeah, they are two different mental paths -- creation (construction) and destruction (de-construction). INTPs are great at the latter; we are reactive typically and immediately see systematic flaws in whatever sort of thing we're versed in (which can be a computer system or a movie/book or a dance).

Creation is difficult, though. I'm creative (I've done cartooning/drawing, and music composition, and writing long stories/journal pieces)... and one of the first things I had to learn to do was shut down the mental editor and just let myself brainstorm and create. I immediately want to analyze as I am creating, but honestly that is the Kiss of Death to creativity; we gotta let it go... because the first draft(s) is always crap and we keep expecting it to be more, and then give up before we give ourselves time to work and rework.

Art is also organic; we have to DO it and put it out there so we can look at it, and the process of doing art actually helps shape our art; it's not the sort of thing that we can preformulate in our heads, it is influenced by engaging the process of creating it. Engaging the process gives us more insights that we then use to tailor what we're doing.

At least, that is what works for me. I'm disappointed sometimes in my [lack of] creativity, I keep expecting myself to be better, but I know I never get better and produce good work unless I'm willing to produce lots of junk in the process of getting to the good final outcome.

Oh and yes, little ones are more interesting when they are not yours, meaning you can send them away when you no longer have the energy for them.

Ayup... the benefit of being grandparents. (Note: No, I'm not a grandparent! But it's what they get to do.)

I think the biggest issue for me as a mom is having to pull out of my head, just when a thought is getting good, to attend to children. My kids are younger. 2, 8, 11. My daughter is in that cool language acquisition phase that is totally different for her than it was with my boys. She is so intelligent, she thinks pretty well for 2 - I think- and says the darndest things. I think my 8 year old is INTP, because he is exactly how I was at his age accept he's a boy, very very smart child. My 11 year old and I are really getting each other these days though I suspect he is going into puberty because he gets so emotional sometimes for nothing. But some of the things he talks about to me really impress me, I suspect he is my artistic child, and he is impressive in social situations - he got that from his dad. I enjoy him more and more and learn more and more about him with each passing year. It's fun!

Yeah, it's really hard to get free uninterrupted periods of time when the kids are younger, and the muse never strikes during the periods we do get; my kids are teens now and seem to want to be alone (or with friends a lot more), but that has its own sadness since it means there is necessary distance there as they actualize and grow into their independence. It's cool in that it frees us up to reclaim part of our lives again, though.

It's neat hearing you talk about them. It is also confirming that one of the INTP contributions to parenthood is seeing who our children actually are (without our domination) and enjoying them for who they are, and equipping them to become more of who they are and freeing them from whatever crap is going to subvert that.

Jenny, I like Street Fighter too. I really loved the Soul Calibur's. I never really got into Star Wars figures, but I loved transformers. Particularly, ones that transformed into more than one thing.

I remember playing around with those too. Transformation where something of the original is kept in the new is fascinating, intellectually; it's basically keeping a system intact but reshaping it in new ways to become something else. The inherent pattern -- the essence -- remains the same, though. It still is what it was; or what it was is part of what it is.

Mostly my videogaming nowadays consists of Dragon Age or MMOs (like WoW or CoH), but on rare occasion I have managed to sneak into a guy gathering and get to play a four-person shooter with them. :D Another guilty pleasure is racing games (I loved Need for Speed).

I do however think I could pull off and open marriage though. In a committed relationship, you are together for many reasons, and particularly because you enjoy each other. I view open marriage as a marriage that allows sex or dating with people outside of the marriage. Sex and relationship is two different things for me. I could, back in the day, have sex with someone and not in the least want a relationship with them. I think I have found in my SO, someone I would like to always have in my life. As much as he gets on my nerves and I don't understand how he tolerates me, he also makes me happy. I truly enjoy him. And I may be able to hang out with other guys and even have sex with them and still believe that my current SO is the one that I want to be with for the long term. It would be a variety thing for me. Of course, I don't know this for absolute sure, because I don't have an open relationship, but in thinking of it, these are my thoughts. Emotionally, I truly think I could do it. And if the relationship ends, it was meant to anyway, so I take the good times and good lessons and keep on moving.

I relate to all that. Pretty much my reservation is what you've said here -- "you don't know absolutely sure" -- and I know that what seems rational to me ahead of time sometimes changes when tempered with experience. We don't remain disengaged from the exploration, it changes us. So I could guess I could handle this sort of thing to some degree, but I'm not sure if the actual person(s) I'd get involved with would change things or if I'd respond differently in the situation.

That is the scary part about "living in the moment" and engaging life, after all; when we don't engage and remain apart, we also remain the same; but as soon as we start REALLY engaging (i.e., emotionally investing), while it feels very good, it also means we open the doorway to ourselves potentially changing.

I can't promise that, if I'd get involved with a new person while still married, I wouldn't fall in love with the new person and would rather be with them instead, and marriage is a big deal to me and the risk of mucking things up would be kind of unsettling. I don't like ending up in situations I didn't think about ahead of time and have some non-messy escape hatches for.

(I know grammatically this is a mess, but I am not going to bother with it because I don't feel like it, I hope you all understand my rambling though)

Lol, no, you're fine. I apologize too like this, I guess it's just wanting people to grasp our true level of competence rather than focusing on the mistakes...
 
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This honestly isn't something I've ever struggled with too much but that may be because I'm a bit more socially blind than some of you are.

I never really attempted to be feminine. I am feminine in some ways, naturally, but as far as doing things that we're expected to do as women and trying to find "female" kinds of interests, I was just never interested.

I'm 26 now so I've accepted a lot of things about myself. I don't relate to most women, when I do find a woman that I truly understand we can click instantly and are pretty much inseperable from that point on. What I struggle with most is loneliness because this rarely happens.

I have a much easier time forming friendships with men. This is nice but it's also a downfall because I've gotten romantically involved in varying degrees with most of them men I've gotten very close to, and when the sexual relationship is over (none of them have ended well) I'm not even left with a friend, and I'm back at square one.

I don't have a terrible time making friends and being sociable once I get past the initial anxiety but I do have an awful time finding people that I find truly interesting and as arrogant as that sounds, it's only becoming more true as I get older.

My interests are neither feminine nor masculine, for the most part. I'm interested in thought and ideas, theories and gaining knowledge. I spend much of my time alone but I'm definitely being truthful when I say that I prefer to do that and gain knowledge as opposed to hanging around with people I find vacuous.

I'd love, love, love to meet to some INTP/Js or equally strange people like me in real life. When it does happen it's wonderful.
 

Riiscup

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I love this forum. I really do. Reading the posts are so reassuring. It's good to know that I am not the only one who thinks like I do (for awhile I thought I was).

Jenny, yes it is freeing in a way when you stop thinking things to death and just dive in. It is scary too. I also wish I didn't waste so many years holding myself back. I still have a ways to go, but I am really proud of myself thus far.

I am far more creative when writing and even when drawing than I ever was when dancing, but I loved dancing the most.

I'm glad you said that you feel sadness for your kids growing up. It reminds me to enjoy my kids while they are young. Secretly, I thought I couldn't wait for them to become teenagers so they would have their own lives and I could get back to mine. But you are right, I should relish this because it doesn't last long. I think the 2 year old is the one. By us being the only girls in the house, she thinks I'm her playmate and should engage her 100% of the time. It's exhausting, but it is fun.

I really like driving games too. I don't get the chance to play nearly as much as I used to anymore though.

Uptown, I don't think I ever "attempted" to be female, or tried finding "female" interests. Anything I was interested in had nothing to do with gender and if it fell one way or the other, well, it just did. Nothing was ever intentional. I too have grown to accept lots of things about myself. I have also identified things that I do not like about myself and I have made it a personal project to improve in these areas. I think at 26, I probably sounded alot like you do, but I was lonely and didn't like lonely so resolved to change. All that being said, I prefer to be alone. But I would like to have people that I enjoy to turn to when I want company. I don't have much of a problem being sociable enough these days, but I certainly continue to find it hard to make real friends.
 
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