briangriffin32
Briangriffin32
Hi all:
ENTP here. I used to think I was an INTP, until I did some further research.
That being said, just wanted to praise the virtues of INTPs from an ENTP perspective.
Ahem....
1) Your ability to analyze something in great detail. I get too impatient with details, and distracted by "the big picture"
2) Your encyclopedic technical knowledge. Some of you can be like walking, talking tech manuals! I'm always more interested in analyzing/manipulating people (I do sales, and am a writer...so I guess that fits). Thus, I envy your more practical theories and problem-solving skills (and in my mind "practical theories" is not a contradiction).
3) Your ability to do things your way, with a seemingly cool indifference to what other people think about you.
4) Your incredible loyalty to your friends and your willingness to stand up for them, despite your normally quiet demeanor.
That being said, I've had at least three close INTP relationships in my life....
1) A roommate in college: I got fed up with him correcting everything I said, and he got fed up with my mood swings so he skidaddled. That being said, I was in a bad place during that time, so it's easy in retrospect to understand his point of view.
2) A fellow classmate/writing partner: He was kind of a downer and very sarcastic, but very friendly and loyal. A misanthrope with a heart of gold. Think Woody Allen. I think his writing was a little too "black". He always enjoyed writing stuff where everyone was screaming at each other. Another problem was his sometimes indifference to personal grooming hygene, but I still enjoyed his company regardless.
3) A fellow work colleague: We worked in different departments. Him in IT. Me in sales. He was the coolest guy I ever met. A genius with computers. He played hockey in high school. Awesome guitar skills. He was even in a death metal band. He seemed like friggin Buckaroo Banzai. The sarcasm and the misanthropy was still there, but I fell for him big time. Unfortunately he was married to another man. Still, after a while we'd flirt like crazy, sometimes unintentionally.
Ah well....To adjourn this potential 1st session of an ENTP + INTP alliance...
Is there anything INTP's admire or even envy about ENTPs? At the risk of sounding self-deprecating, I wonder what they get out of it. They seem so smart, and independent. What do they need ENTPs for?
ENTP here. I used to think I was an INTP, until I did some further research.
That being said, just wanted to praise the virtues of INTPs from an ENTP perspective.
Ahem....
1) Your ability to analyze something in great detail. I get too impatient with details, and distracted by "the big picture"
2) Your encyclopedic technical knowledge. Some of you can be like walking, talking tech manuals! I'm always more interested in analyzing/manipulating people (I do sales, and am a writer...so I guess that fits). Thus, I envy your more practical theories and problem-solving skills (and in my mind "practical theories" is not a contradiction).
3) Your ability to do things your way, with a seemingly cool indifference to what other people think about you.
4) Your incredible loyalty to your friends and your willingness to stand up for them, despite your normally quiet demeanor.
That being said, I've had at least three close INTP relationships in my life....
1) A roommate in college: I got fed up with him correcting everything I said, and he got fed up with my mood swings so he skidaddled. That being said, I was in a bad place during that time, so it's easy in retrospect to understand his point of view.
2) A fellow classmate/writing partner: He was kind of a downer and very sarcastic, but very friendly and loyal. A misanthrope with a heart of gold. Think Woody Allen. I think his writing was a little too "black". He always enjoyed writing stuff where everyone was screaming at each other. Another problem was his sometimes indifference to personal grooming hygene, but I still enjoyed his company regardless.
3) A fellow work colleague: We worked in different departments. Him in IT. Me in sales. He was the coolest guy I ever met. A genius with computers. He played hockey in high school. Awesome guitar skills. He was even in a death metal band. He seemed like friggin Buckaroo Banzai. The sarcasm and the misanthropy was still there, but I fell for him big time. Unfortunately he was married to another man. Still, after a while we'd flirt like crazy, sometimes unintentionally.

Ah well....To adjourn this potential 1st session of an ENTP + INTP alliance...
Is there anything INTP's admire or even envy about ENTPs? At the risk of sounding self-deprecating, I wonder what they get out of it. They seem so smart, and independent. What do they need ENTPs for?