Kudryavka
Nostalgia Junkie
So just for kicks, a while back after getting into MBTI a bit, I had my boyfriend take a brief personality quiz to see what his result would be. It came back INFJ. Weird, because although he is staggeringly sensitive and kind to me, he doesn't really strike me as a social justice crusader.
Recently after more research into the different types I started scratching my head in confusion. "What, is he really an INFJ? He doesn't seem like one to me..." So I had him take a test again, this time one that gives percentages to show you how significantly you favor one function over the other. The result was quite interesting; he still tested INFJ but the test revealed that only N was significantly favored. He was only 2% F over T, if I remember correctly.
Since then I've been trying to pin him down because I think it will help me understand our relationship better. In general, I find INTJs to be incredibly attractive (might be my favorite of the types), but I don't think I feel the same way about INFJs. Interestingly, I would say he came off as more of an INTJ when we first started dating than he does now, and sure enough, my (romantic) interest in him has dwindled since then.
I have a pet theory about the reason for this. When we were first getting to know each other, he was surrounded by male friends, most of whom had leanings towards non-F interests. Nowadays he mostly only sees me, a blatant INFP. His behavior around me is naturally different than around other people, since I'm far closer to him than anyone else (even any male friends). So I thought I'd seek the opinions of an unbiased audience here!
Traits of his that seem to lean T (hot hot hot
):
- A quiet confidence in his own intellect and knowledge. Usually not displayed as obvious arrogance; if anything it usually manifests in a comedic fashion. He comes home every day from class or from the grocery store with a story about a new level of human stupidity he had to suffer that day, and tells it in the most hilarious and animated way. I'm starting to think he secretly enjoys it when people do irrational and stupid things because he gets to freak out about it.
- He plays many console and PC games of many different genres, but seems partial to puzzle games recently. I know that he is an RTS fan (as am I). I don't play many games, but I have an interesting observation based on a game that both of us did play. I used to enjoy casually playing the Sims primarily for the amusement of their social interactions (and because it was fun to torture them). I let him play it here and he got addicted to it for a few days, trying to manage the sim household efficiently in order to get promotions in order to make more money. (He says "winning" is when you are able to buy the most expensive items. I say there's no such thing as "winning" in the Sims; the complex web of sim relationships is rewarding in and of itself.)
- He surfs the internet and collects a bunch of interesting facts daily, usually pertaining to some observed idiocy (either in personal life, the gaming world, or politics), a new scientific discovery, or history. He then takes notes to help himself remember said facts and stubbornly tries to infodump me with all of them in the first few minutes that he sees me (usually when I've just got home from work and want some time to myself for a bit). My reaction of disinterest or even obvious frustration ("Are you done yet?!") has led to hurt feelings on his part, thinking that I wasn't interested in anything he had to tell me. In reality, most of his facts are quite interesting, but no matter how many times I tell him, I don't think he understands that I live in my own little mental world and that his constant injections of trivia are disrupting my precious thought patterns. When we talk about this stuff over dinner or something, we connect wonderfully. But he's like a child when he learns something interesting; he seems to not be able to wait to share it with me at the appropriate time and then seems to get a little sulky when I don't want to hear.
- He seems to make extra effort not to do this with me, but I'm always shocked when I hear him communicate with his mother or other people he isn't as close to. He doesn't "read between the lines" when they ask him questions; he simply gives short blunt answers rather than elaborating with details that would be important to know. Sometimes I suspect that he is being difficult on purpose, but on the occasions that this happens between us, he seems genuinely baffled when I get upset.
- His most hated subject in school was creative writing. He says he isn't creative in the least, and claims to be incapable of acting. He showed me a home video of a Christmas play in which he participated as a child. When he got up to read his lines he stood dead still and presented them in a hilariously detached, disinterested, and consistent monotone. I believe him.
Traits that seem to lean F:
- He is clingy. Incredibly so. He isn't that jealous or possessive, at least not in an unhealthy way, but he constantly wants to be with me whenever he can, which roughly translates to "every day after I get home from work". Telling him I need some time alone feels like telling a lonely puppy to quit following me. He doesn't try to manipulate my emotions, but I can tell that he is disappointed when I don't want to see him, and it makes me feel bad. XD
- He had a stressful family life with a verbally abusive father prone to random outbursts and a highly irrational (albeit goodnatured) SF mother. He told me that at one point he came to a crossroads between "kill myself" and "fuck everything, I don't care". He never had a friend as close as me before and told me that my kindness helped him "get his emotions back". He used to be quite emotionally-reserved when speaking with strangers; he now seems much more agreeable and polite, smiling and laughing more.
- He seems to dislike angry confrontation and seems to internalize the stress to the point where it has either caused or at least aggravated his health problems. At one point during our relationship he had a massive emotional breakdown which left him bedridden and unable to eat much of anything but crackers. During that time he had this weird thing where he was terribly lonely without me and wanted to see me, but the emotional stimulation of seeing me for any prolonged period of time was too much. He would either get really tired or feel sick and I'd have to leave.
- He strikes me as the most sensitive man I have ever met; I feel like I could hurt him so easily if I wanted to. (I really don't want to!) He's extremely sentimental about material things; he occasionally participates in my INFP rituals of feeling bad for inanimate objects in general, but if I ever show attachment to one of my possessions and then later try to get rid of it, it's a foregone conclusion that I will have problems persuading him to let me do it. "But it's yours! You've always had it!"
Right now I feel like he's either:
1. An emotionally-scarred INTJ who really, really, really loves me, in order to be so supportive and understanding of my NF-ness
2. A childhood INFJ who resorted to behaving like an INTJ as a last resort and is slowly but surely learning to let down that defense and "be himself".
How do you think I could go about ruling out one of these two possibilities? I wouldn't want to treat him like a "broken" INFJ if he was in fact INTJ, and I wouldn't want to idealize him as an INTJ if in reality that was not the case, either. I'm curious to have more insight about this because I think it will help me in my approach to our relationship going forward.
Recently after more research into the different types I started scratching my head in confusion. "What, is he really an INFJ? He doesn't seem like one to me..." So I had him take a test again, this time one that gives percentages to show you how significantly you favor one function over the other. The result was quite interesting; he still tested INFJ but the test revealed that only N was significantly favored. He was only 2% F over T, if I remember correctly.
Since then I've been trying to pin him down because I think it will help me understand our relationship better. In general, I find INTJs to be incredibly attractive (might be my favorite of the types), but I don't think I feel the same way about INFJs. Interestingly, I would say he came off as more of an INTJ when we first started dating than he does now, and sure enough, my (romantic) interest in him has dwindled since then.
I have a pet theory about the reason for this. When we were first getting to know each other, he was surrounded by male friends, most of whom had leanings towards non-F interests. Nowadays he mostly only sees me, a blatant INFP. His behavior around me is naturally different than around other people, since I'm far closer to him than anyone else (even any male friends). So I thought I'd seek the opinions of an unbiased audience here!
Traits of his that seem to lean T (hot hot hot
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- A quiet confidence in his own intellect and knowledge. Usually not displayed as obvious arrogance; if anything it usually manifests in a comedic fashion. He comes home every day from class or from the grocery store with a story about a new level of human stupidity he had to suffer that day, and tells it in the most hilarious and animated way. I'm starting to think he secretly enjoys it when people do irrational and stupid things because he gets to freak out about it.
- He plays many console and PC games of many different genres, but seems partial to puzzle games recently. I know that he is an RTS fan (as am I). I don't play many games, but I have an interesting observation based on a game that both of us did play. I used to enjoy casually playing the Sims primarily for the amusement of their social interactions (and because it was fun to torture them). I let him play it here and he got addicted to it for a few days, trying to manage the sim household efficiently in order to get promotions in order to make more money. (He says "winning" is when you are able to buy the most expensive items. I say there's no such thing as "winning" in the Sims; the complex web of sim relationships is rewarding in and of itself.)
- He surfs the internet and collects a bunch of interesting facts daily, usually pertaining to some observed idiocy (either in personal life, the gaming world, or politics), a new scientific discovery, or history. He then takes notes to help himself remember said facts and stubbornly tries to infodump me with all of them in the first few minutes that he sees me (usually when I've just got home from work and want some time to myself for a bit). My reaction of disinterest or even obvious frustration ("Are you done yet?!") has led to hurt feelings on his part, thinking that I wasn't interested in anything he had to tell me. In reality, most of his facts are quite interesting, but no matter how many times I tell him, I don't think he understands that I live in my own little mental world and that his constant injections of trivia are disrupting my precious thought patterns. When we talk about this stuff over dinner or something, we connect wonderfully. But he's like a child when he learns something interesting; he seems to not be able to wait to share it with me at the appropriate time and then seems to get a little sulky when I don't want to hear.
- He seems to make extra effort not to do this with me, but I'm always shocked when I hear him communicate with his mother or other people he isn't as close to. He doesn't "read between the lines" when they ask him questions; he simply gives short blunt answers rather than elaborating with details that would be important to know. Sometimes I suspect that he is being difficult on purpose, but on the occasions that this happens between us, he seems genuinely baffled when I get upset.
- His most hated subject in school was creative writing. He says he isn't creative in the least, and claims to be incapable of acting. He showed me a home video of a Christmas play in which he participated as a child. When he got up to read his lines he stood dead still and presented them in a hilariously detached, disinterested, and consistent monotone. I believe him.

Traits that seem to lean F:
- He is clingy. Incredibly so. He isn't that jealous or possessive, at least not in an unhealthy way, but he constantly wants to be with me whenever he can, which roughly translates to "every day after I get home from work". Telling him I need some time alone feels like telling a lonely puppy to quit following me. He doesn't try to manipulate my emotions, but I can tell that he is disappointed when I don't want to see him, and it makes me feel bad. XD
- He had a stressful family life with a verbally abusive father prone to random outbursts and a highly irrational (albeit goodnatured) SF mother. He told me that at one point he came to a crossroads between "kill myself" and "fuck everything, I don't care". He never had a friend as close as me before and told me that my kindness helped him "get his emotions back". He used to be quite emotionally-reserved when speaking with strangers; he now seems much more agreeable and polite, smiling and laughing more.
- He seems to dislike angry confrontation and seems to internalize the stress to the point where it has either caused or at least aggravated his health problems. At one point during our relationship he had a massive emotional breakdown which left him bedridden and unable to eat much of anything but crackers. During that time he had this weird thing where he was terribly lonely without me and wanted to see me, but the emotional stimulation of seeing me for any prolonged period of time was too much. He would either get really tired or feel sick and I'd have to leave.
- He strikes me as the most sensitive man I have ever met; I feel like I could hurt him so easily if I wanted to. (I really don't want to!) He's extremely sentimental about material things; he occasionally participates in my INFP rituals of feeling bad for inanimate objects in general, but if I ever show attachment to one of my possessions and then later try to get rid of it, it's a foregone conclusion that I will have problems persuading him to let me do it. "But it's yours! You've always had it!"
Right now I feel like he's either:
1. An emotionally-scarred INTJ who really, really, really loves me, in order to be so supportive and understanding of my NF-ness
2. A childhood INFJ who resorted to behaving like an INTJ as a last resort and is slowly but surely learning to let down that defense and "be himself".
How do you think I could go about ruling out one of these two possibilities? I wouldn't want to treat him like a "broken" INFJ if he was in fact INTJ, and I wouldn't want to idealize him as an INTJ if in reality that was not the case, either. I'm curious to have more insight about this because I think it will help me in my approach to our relationship going forward.