Of course, this test is bogus.

When my mom took the test, she was hard-pressed to answer with a mere Yes or No the question, "Do you often leave parties early?"
Finally, she said, "If I want a ride home, I do." Dad is an ISTJ.

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Haha! Actually, I'd guess Matt Foley is more like the opposite of a person who has discovered who he really is. He's utterly bitter and cynical. When someone is chronically unhappy, I think it usually means they're either fighting to suppress some inner drive, or are at least allowing it to be suppressed by other people or their environment.Gosso wrote: In How I Found Freedom, Harry Browne talks about discovering who you truly are and then placing yourself in an environment which matches that. But unfortunately, I'm unsure of what my true personality is. I have a rough idea, but I'm not satisfied with that version. I'm unsure which parts of my personality are the true self or from cultural programming.
I might be over thinking this, but discovering who you are seems to be the most important problem one can solve. I just fear I'll go too deep and end up living in a VAN BY THE RIVER!
(maybe not a bad option?)
Hmmm...sounds like I have some more thinking to do...it's times like these I wish I had an isolation tank.Tortoise wrote: Haha! Actually, I'd guess Matt Foley is more like the opposite of a person who has discovered who he really is. He's utterly bitter and cynical. When someone is chronically unhappy, I think it usually means they're either fighting to suppress some inner drive, or are at least allowing it to be suppressed by other people or their environment.
People who have discovered their inner passion and pursue it with zest seem like the most genuinely happy people in the world.
That makes two of us. I'll probably still be trying to figure out "what I want to do when I grow up" when I'm 80 years old.Gosso wrote: Hmmm...sounds like I have some more thinking to do...it's times like these I wish I had an isolation tank.
No kidding. I need to have a good long conversation with God!Tortoise wrote: That makes two of us. I'll probably still be trying to figure out "what I want to do when I grow up" when I'm 80 years old.
I'd love to try out an isolation tank sometime, ideally after having an appropriate mycological snack. Given the popularity of Joe Rogan's podcast, and the fact that he talks constantly about his isolation tank, I suspect he has probably single-handedly caused a noticeable boom in the manufacturing and selling of isolation tanks since late 2009.
True, but I'm sure there are also forums out there that appeal to ESFP types (the "opposite" of INTJ), for example, forums for gregarious musical performers, stage actors, fashion designers, comedians, etc.alvinroast wrote: It's been a long time, but I think mine varied between INFP and INTJ. It was close. Someone in another forum I'm in ran a poll and the results were similar. I suspect that those who can read and write and sit at a computer are long enough to read through a thread are similar types.![]()
Wow, a couple of hundred bucks an hour seems a bit much, even for someone who's really eager to try it. And if there's any activity that's fundamentally incompatible with having to worry about a timer, it's exploring inner space in an isolation tank.alvinroast wrote: I too want an isolation tank. I went so far as to price them after finding out that it's a couple hundred bucks an hour to rent. I was worried that I would stay in there for hours not knowing how much time had passed and emerge having run up a huge tab.
I'm also a Scorpio, left handed, and scored ENTJ on Myers-Brigg....MediumTex wrote: I'm a Scorpio...and left-handed. I wonder how that fits into the Meyers-Brigg methodology.
That's because this is a forum on investing populated predominately by libertarian-leaners.MachineGhost wrote: Definitely a lot more Thinkers than Feelers on here.