Here’s How to Love Each Introverted Myers-Briggs Personality Type
A lot of factors go into love, but here’s one very important way to express it to your introverted partner, based on their Myers-Briggs personality type.
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A lot of factors go into love, but here’s one very important way to express it to your introverted partner, based on their Myers-Briggs personality type.
The INFJ, one of the 16 Myers-Briggs personality types, is known as both a dreamer and a doer. Here’s a glimpse into how this personality travels.
Dating an INTP is like opening one of those surprise mystery bags — you never know what you’re going to get. We’re the wild cards of the Myers-Briggs world.
INFJs are looking for a soul-to-soul connection, and in a romantic relationship, they want to know their partner deeply, and be known deeply in return.
Introverts, here’s one word to describe you as a partner in a romantic relationship, based on your Myers-Briggs personality type.
You’ve heard of “resting bitch face.” Well, I have something different. I’m an INFJ personality, and I suffer from “resting sad face.”
For INTPs, stress usually begins as a primary-tertiary loop (Ti and Si), where our internal framework of reality clashes with nostalgic notes from the past.
The INFJ is one of the most complex and contradictory personalities of the Myers-Briggs types. For me, this often leads to feeling completely hypocritical.
Rational introverted women — the INTJ, INTP, ISTJ, and ISTP — have a bad rep for seeming cold and unapproachable. Here’s what they’re really like.
In order to take care of ourselves — so that we can continue helping others — we INFJs need to add a new word to our vocabulary.