Download Episode Hereright click link and select “Save Link As…”

In this episode, Joel and Antonia talk about the Myers-Briggs cognitive functions and their relationship to time.

In this podcast you’ll find:

  • A float tank is excellent for Introverted Intuition
  • Introversion and extraversion have an interesting relationship with time and space.
  • All the extraverted functions live in the outside world.
  • So they are intrinsically tied to the laws of interfacing, which are laws we need to agree on to interface with other people.
  • One of those laws is the law of time.
  • We, as humans, experience time linearly.
  • We are linear but time and space are not.
  • All the extraverted functions are bound to time and space as a continuum.
  • The introverted functions are untethered from the laws of interfacing because they are inside of us, so they aren’t tethered to linear time.
  • Extraverted Functions:
    • 2 Extraverted Perceiving functions:
      • Extraverted Intuition
      • Extraverted Sensing
  • These are the parts of us that want to have freedom and learn, so they are the most rebellious to time.
  • These functions tend to resent time because it means less time for experiences.
  • 2 Extraverted Judging Functions
    • Extraverted Feeling
    • Extraverted Thinking
  • These functions are more likely to hand themselves over to time because they recognize the need for schedules.
  • You recognize you can’t have full freedom and get goals accomplished.
  • Extraverted Intuition tries to cheat time by packing as many experiences in as possible
  • Extraverted Sensing cheats time by being present and having the most intense experiences it can.
  • Extraverted Perceiving functions are both eager for experiences.
  • All extraverted functions acknowledge that the rules of time and space exist, but they react differently to them.
  • Extraverted perceiving functions rebel against time
  • Extraverted judging functions work within the laws of time.
  • All introverted functions don’t need to interact with the outer world at all.
  • Introverted Functions:
    • 2 Introverted Perceiving functions
      • Introverted Intuition
      • Introverted Sensing
    • 2 Introverted Judging functions
      • Introverted Thinking
      • Introverted Feeling
  • Introverted functions get to decide whether or not to interface with time.
  • Introverted Sensing is fascinated with the past
  • Introverted Intuition is more interested in the future.
  • But both can interact with the past or future.
  • They capture experiences and bring them inside to interact with at their leisure.
  • Post-processing.
  • Introverted Perceiving processes don’t need to obey the laws of time, but they master it within themselves
  • This is why Introverted perceivers will sometimes struggle with time management because the outer world isn’t their usual way of interacting with time.
  • INFJs and ISFJs may struggle with organization because they must wait for a catalyst or need to get them into action.
  • So, these types may struggle to interface with time similarly to Extraverted Perceivers.
  • Introverted Judging functions are the least tied to time because they create systems in their heads.
  • Time Binding is a thought or concept written down thousands of years ago which holds up thousands of years later.
  • Data isn’t bound by time.
  • Extraverted Judging functions are the most likely to hand themselves over to the rules of time.
  • Introverted Judging functions are the least likely to hand themselves over to time.
  • Introverted Perceiving functions could ignore time, but they have chosen not to because it is pleasurable for them to be gods over time.
  • Introverted functions are often called selfish because they are self-oriented.
  • All the extraverted functions are imperious. They believe they should be able to get their way.
  • This info may help us give grace to each other.
  • Introverts aren’t selfish; they just self-reference.
  • Extraverts aren’t overstepping they are just experiencing in the outer world.
  • Sit down and write down your four-function stack, as we do in the car model.
  • The ENTP driver process is Extraverted Intuition which rebels against time as much as it can.
  • ENTPs copilot is Introverted Thinking which doesn’t care that much for time.
  • So, an ENTP needs to find another part of themselves to interact with time in a better way.
  • ENTPs tertiary is Extraverted Feeling which has a responsive relationship to time.
  • So, an ENTP needs to set up catalysts in life to put them into motion and get things done to meet external needs.
  • It may be okay for you to be beholden to people if it helps you get things done.
  • ENTPs inferior is Introverted Sensing which isn’t going to interface with time reliably, but it can review concepts of time.
  • Extraverted Intuition wants to rebel against time, but Introverted Sensing sees itself as the master of time and has a friendlier relationship to it.
  • So, if an ENTP wants to develop a friendly relationship with time, they can use their inferior function to develop a friendlier relationship with time.
  • But the highest leverage function for the ENTP to interface well with time is their tertiary, Extraverted Feeling.
  • It won’t be a strength. It will be a bit idealistic and sloppy, at first.
  • ENTPs are very good at performing at the eleventh hour which helps them overcome their weaknesses with time
  • ENTPs have a more responsive relationship with time than ENFPs who must use their tertiary Extraverted Thinking.
  • Extraverted Thinking is going to be more proactive with time and less responsive.
  • ENFPs may tether to time better than ENTPs because of their tertiary.
  • Our relationship to time and space is only one node of how we interact with time and space.
  • So, are IPs screwed? No
  • When Introverted Feeling or Thinking realize something is truly important to them, they bring all the conviction and integrity with them and blast it to the outside world.
  • IPs can be unstoppable.
  • Because IPs can’t rely upon time and space as the thing that gets them going, they need to use their superpower of conviction and integrity to determine what is important.
  • You aren’t screwed if you don’t have a natural tethering to time.
  • The stereotype is that the EJs have the most natural ability to interact with time and space.
  • But EJs lack the relationship with their inner calibration, so the things they get done aren’t serving them as well as if they were able to interface more fully with inner conviction and integrity.
  • Don’t see this as fatalistic.
  • There are many components to getting things done.
  • One of the advantages to extraverted perceiving functions is that they still recognize the laws of time and space.
  • So they get a lot done.
  • They are less worried about the economy of their actions.

 In this episode Joel and Antonia talk about the Myers-Briggs cognitive functions and their relationship to time. #MBTI #myersbriggs

To subscribe to the podcast, please use the links below:

Subscribe with iTunes
Non-iTunes Link
Soundcloud
Stitcher
Google Play
Spotify
Radio Public
PlayerFM
Listen Notes

If you like the podcast and want to help us out in return, please leave an honest rating and review on iTunes by clicking here. It will help the show and its ranking in iTunes immensely! We would be eternally grateful!

Want to learn more?

Discover Your Personal Genius

free-personality-test-myers-briggs-2

We want to hear from you. Leave your comments below…

26 comments

  • Leanne
    • Leanne
    • September 24, 2019 at 8:57 am

    Joel and Antonia, this was a great podcast. As an INFP, I have something to contribute about the space aspect of time/space. Please bear with me while I explain the context:
    I am visually-impaired and unable to see the car model as it appears on my computer screen. For the last two and a half years, I have simply listened to your description of how it works and created my own mental image of the driver and passengers. Today, however, perhaps for the first time, you summarised the car model in terms of quadrants, referencing the front right-hand quadrant as the driver, and I had a moment of cognitive dissonance that felt as if my brain were having to turn itself inside-out. Surely, I thought, Antonia has made a mistake? Why hasn’t Joel picked it up? Then I realised that I live in a country where cars have right-hand steering, while you live in the US where cars have the steering wheel on the left. In other words, my mental image was the reverse of the one on the PH website even though it was perfectly functional.
    Now, the above is just a funny story until you consider it as an example of how the introverted feeling function or Authenticity relates to spacial models. Being visually-impaired, I discount the external world with its actual displays of quadrant diagrams, creating instead an internal image which serves the same purpose. Spatial arrangement is still very much a part of my process of understanding, but it is not the same arrangement as you see. Essentially, I am treating space as an inner resource, something I can manipulate to make sense of things, but which need not resemble what others experience at all.
    I never thought of space this way before but it is really quite fascinating. Whereas most people believe space to be an entirely self-evident and commonly-held concept about the world in which we live, it must actually be subject to language and culture, or how else would I have visualised the car model as I did? Space is really very open to rearrangement indeed if you consider the way we picture settings in novels or the faces of presenters on the radio!

  • Dana
    • Dana
    • September 25, 2019 at 8:49 pm

    Love the abstract deep-dive on this topic! It was very insightful to hear you unpack some of the type-based tensions regarding time and time management, especially when considering it in the context of co-worker or family dynamics at the local level. In previous episodes, you have referenced motivation and tasks/timelines with regard to Future Self, which also resonates. Adding kids into the mix — even as an ENTJ — has required me to recalibrate a lot of personal expectations around time and space. Thanks for another great episode.

  • Rhonda Weeks
    • Rhonda Weeks
    • September 29, 2019 at 1:41 pm

    I needed this podcast and this site in 1984 when I was first typed as an ENTP. My life could have been so much more productive! I finally learned to lean on my other functions, especially my Si. The Si ability to harness the past and categorize it led me to finally making notecards for research papers and it was like a light came on. I started making to do and shopping lists. But I am still motivated almost solely by my Ti devotion to what makes sense and sometimes struggle with remembering to let my Fe take stock of my people. Sometimes I get a look at myself from the outside and see just how unresponsive I can be and really how emotionally tone deaf to other people I can be—okay AM on a regular basis. I’m going to go listen to one of the podcasts on developing my Fe.

  • Mark
    • Mark
    • September 27, 2019 at 6:31 pm

    By IP, I really mean IFP/INFP.

  • Leanne
    • Leanne
    • September 24, 2019 at 8:54 am

    With regard to time, I find that my biggest issue as an INFP is that I hate to be interrupted. Whatever I am doing or saying, I like to be able to complete the part I am focused on before I have to yield to someone else’s agenda.
    For example, this morning over breakfast I was answering a question my husband had asked. Halfway through, he shifted his attention to our puppy who was licking his ankle. Feeling annoyed, I waited for him to return his attention to what I was trying to say but it was as if he had forgotten all about it.
    I lead with Authenticity so I had the conviction that what I was saying needed to be heard. But if I reacted with Authenticity I would have to complain that my husband had disrespected me. My copilot of Exploration couldn’t help because it wanted to ignore the interruption and finish talking, whether he heard me or not, but that would still make me mad. In the end, I resorted to my tertiary Memory function and did what I was raised to do; that is, politely allow my husband’s attention to veer away in the hope that it would return, and when it didn’t, accept that time had moved on.
    Thanks for provoking some good avenues for investigation, guys, and thanks Antonia for sharing your flash of insight from the float tank!

Leave a comment

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.