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In this episode Joel and Antonia dive deep into the needs and desires of the ISTJ personality type.
In this podcast on the ISTJ personality type you’ll find:
We recommend listening to the ISFJ podcast and the Sensing podcast as a reference.
We also use the Car Model to go through the Cognitive Function stack – These are the parts of our minds that influence our personality the most.
The ISTJ driver process is Introverted Sensing, which we have nicknamed “Memory.”
- Memory is a learning sensing process. It’s about what has been proven to be reliable based on past experiences and post processing information. Absorbing info then figuring out what that info means over time. It involves comparing and contrasting internal and external experiences and creating metrics.
- Unlike ISFJs that pair memory with a Feeling process, ISTJs pair it with a Thinking process. Where ISFJs think about how people are impacting their experience, ISTJs think about how systems are affecting them.
The co-pilot process is Extraverted Thinking, which we have nicknamed “Effectiveness.”
- Effectiveness helps ISTJs get things done in a set order. It helps them see the steps that will put them on the right trajectory in the external world.
- The strength of an ISTJ is project management, understanding the sequence of steps to make things happen from start to finish. Their strength is building a system and procedures that will keep that system running efficiently.
- Their superpower is bringing order to chaos. They need a lot of lead time to think things through, but once they get something they want to be left alone to implement their ideas. They want to be reliable and want to rely on other people.
- Initially they are very careful and go by the book when learning a process or job. Then after they are more comfortable with the process, they tend to bend the rules to optimize the outcome.
ISTJs 10-year-old process is Introverted Feeling, which we have nicknamed “Authenticity.”
- As an Introvert, ISTJs can skip past Effectiveness and go to their less developed function of Authenticity.
- If ISTJs use Authenticity in a defensive position, they stop thinking about what is efficient and start obsessing about how things are impacting them and their ego.
- In a defensive position, an ISTJ can go overboard on perfectionism and be sensitive to criticism. Their actions will show they don’t want to be questioned or receive feedback that they are doing something wrong. (ISTJs are among the most Introverted of all the Introverted types.)
- To overcome this, an ISTJ can think about where they can become better skilled at communicating ideas to other people and not impute wrong motives to others. Ask “Where did the system fail?”
- Authenticity for an ISTJ can show up as only wanting to deal or do business with people who share similar ideals, thereby excluding those who are considered outsiders.
- Get out of the 10-year-old process and back into Effectiveness, which will allow the ISTJ to open up to new ideas and hold space for what’s working, instead of getting hung up over what is different.
ISTJs 3-year-old process is Extraverted Intuition, which we have nicknamed “Exploration.”
- Exploration requires an openness to novelty. Anyone using Exploration in a healthy way will hold more space for what’s new.
- For anyone who wants to feel in control of the world, novelty can be an easy place to feel threatened and react defensively.
- A better way to feel empowered is to ask “What works?” in any given situation. It allows the Effectiveness user to take back their power by affecting change and creating the world they want to live in.
- Going to Effectiveness will help the ISTJ feel like they have a container of safety that will allow them to relax and have fun.
- ISTJs can express quirky sense of humor and feel free to banter and be playful.
Female ISTJs are in a unique situation because they aren’t the typical Feeler female. They still need to rely upon that Effectiveness process to control their world.
If we are developing our co-pilot we can bring the 10-year-old into the equation in a healthy way. Use Authenticity to express kindness or support when in the service of the co-pilot.
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36 comments
I relate very much to the following quote: “Initially they are very careful and go by the book when learning a process or job. Then after they are more comfortable with the process, they tend to bend the rules to optimize the outcome.” However, I would reword the last sentence. ISTJ’s don’t bend the rules. I classify myself as a rule follower. Rules are important to us, and others breaking rules causes us great frustration/anxiety. We REWRITE the rules to make the system work better. We are always refining, simplifying (cannot stand unnecessary steps), and improving systems to be more effective.
I am an ISTJ. The information from this podcast was dead on for me. I loved the stories and examples that helped me understand why I think and react the way I do. I also happily realize I do dabble in the copilot seat! I have adjusted socially and have many good friends.
Thanks to both of you for being so effective in verbalizing such intricate information.
Hello I’m very much an ISTJ female, and most of the women around me were are very much into for women, opening up to each other because of emotional needs etc…I have a very hard time relating to these women. I also work in EMS which i think has made it even more difficult…I do consider myself to be a very laid back istj however. I can take charge and get things done, but if someone more extroverted/loud etc wants to do so, and they aren’t harming anything, I’ll just as easily slip into the back ground.
Extravert is the proper spelling from a Latin perspective. Extra means outside and vertere means to turn. So an “extravert” turns outward. Extrovert is bad Latin. It was created as a comfortable comparison to introvert. Dictionaries list extrovert as the common spelling, but MBTI experts and psychology journals generally stick with extravert as the more correct spelling.
We use Carl Jung’s spelling which is extrAvert. Here’s a nice little article on the subject:
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/beautiful-minds/the-difference-between-extraversion-and-extroversion/
“Folklore has it that when Carl Jung was once asked which was the correct spelling—ExtrAvert or ExtrOvert—Jung’s secretary wrote back something like, ‘Dr. Jung says it’s ExtrAverted, because ExtrOverted is just bad latin.’”
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