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In this episode Joel and Antonia talk about how Intuitives can avoid developing a superiority complex.

In this podcast you’ll find:

The idea of iNtuitive superiority surfaces when Intuitives encounter Myers-Briggs.

Our mission is to get the concept of the iNtuition/Sensor dichotomy into the public consciousness so each can hold more space for the other.

Intuitives can feel disenfranchised when they have only experienced a dominant sensor environment. They’ve had a lot of feelings of inferiority or marginalization because they’ve never felt like they fit in.

When someone who has felt marginalized encounters MBTI, they have a tendency to run with it and turn it into a reason for superiority.

We see typology, the ability to understand ourselves and others, as one of the foundational elements of personal growth.

When we talk about an iNtuitive awakening, we want it to come from a personal development framework.

The Huge introvert movement has been popping up in recent years in an attempt to empower introverts to feel okay about being different.

Introverts are not broken. They have specific needs. They need alone time. Their mind goes through more channels when making decisions than extraverts.

The Introvert/Extravert movement has encouraged us as to the potential of the iNtuitive/Sensor movement.

There are a couple of differences though that will make it more challenging.

Introversion/Extraversion is generally accepted by the psychological world, whereas Sensing/iNtuition are unique to the MBTI system.

PHQ: Is There Scientific Evidence For Myers Briggs

Introvert/Extravert split is about 50/50 in the population. More numbers to create that tipping point so necessary for societal shifts.

Sensor/iNtuition is a 75/25 split. Less represented. Less understood. Less recognized.

There are clear advantages with both introversion and extraversion.

There tends to be a mystical element when we explain the iNtuitive processes. We have a tendency to romanticize Intuition.

There’s less introvert vs. extravert division in that one doesn’t necessarily feel hugely disenfranchised by the other.

We don’t want to romanticize iNtuition. We don’t want people saying they wish they were iNtuitive. We prefer this dichotomy be seen as mundane because it is mundane in the sense that it is a daily experience for 25% of the population.

The tendency for iNtuitives online to act like dicks to Sensors is only going to challenge the iNtuitive awakening.

In our opinion, an Intuitive Awakening is good for everyone.

If we feel iNtuitives are superior to Sensors we need to root that out. It is wildly inaccurate.

It creates a win/lose scenario which never works.

Podcast: Introverted Intuition vs Extraverted Intuition

Intuition does not equal intelligence. It is just perceiving of the world in a different way – Using advanced pattern recognition to see what is behind the curtain.

Intuitives are not more intelligent than Sensors

Podcast: Howard Gardner Multiple Intelligence Theory

Certain kinds of intelligence trend to certain types.

INTJs trend to being the smartest person in the room in the way that society honors analytical intelligence. This doesn’t mean INTJs are the smartest full stop. Just in their type of intelligence.

There are multiple styles of intelligence.

Sensor types will trend toward different styles of intelligence.

Society goes through phases of when they honor the different kinds of intelligence.

Podcast: General Semantics

We use the same word to mean multiple things.

We’d like to see iNtuition awakened on all levels. Even Sensors have an iNtuitive cognitive function in their car model.

Video on being inclusionary when referring to iNtuition.

Where your iNtuitive Cognitive Function shows up in your stack will influence you.

We can’t have “us vs. them” segregation mindset.

Our request is that if you have any inferiority/superiority over your type, (aka type patriotism) recognize that you have some stuff going on inside of you that has nothing to do with being iNtuitive. You are using being iNtuitive as a way to avoid dealing with your stuff.

Let us do everything we can to operate on a high vibration. This isn’t the place to put your wounds on display. This is the place to raise ourselves up and make all of us better. If you see any segregation happening, call it out. Make sure to point out that there isn’t a place for this type of mentality. It doesn’t serve anybody.

In this episode Joel and Antonia talk about how Intuitives can avoid developing a superiority complex. #podcast #MBTI

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20 comments

  • Amy
    • Amy
    • August 24, 2016 at 2:32 pm

    Thank you for this insightful podcast! I’m new to discovering your site (and MBTI in general.) Took 4 different tests on different days, came out an INFJ who’s married to an ISTP (and come from a family of sensors.) We don’t see eye-to-eye all of the time, and I will admit even if subconsciously, I’ve felt both inferior and superior at times. Growing up I’ve always felt like the “weird” one/different. Was even misdiagnosed as being bipolar and borderline personality at age 14, put on a cocktail of mind-numbing meds, which I stupidly took for years. Guess that’s where some of my feelings of resentment/marginalization come from. Only when I turned 24 did I decide to get off them, and discover my true self. Now I’m 30, know there’s nothing really wrong with me, and it’s been an interesting journey to say the least! I will definitely try to be more accepting and open-minded of other types now!

  • Jill
    • Jill
    • August 24, 2016 at 6:26 pm

    Hahah..Great podcast! I love what you guys are about—and I appreciate the TONS of awareness I have developed from it. It’s a real life changer for me. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

  • Bryce
    • Bryce
    • August 24, 2016 at 2:39 am

    I am an INFJ … So, statistically, my type is, well, most likely to be guilty of this. I recently discovered my type through this sight. This podcast hit me hard. These four letters provide a pseudo confidence that is dangerously close to a complex. My experiences with Ni have been..eventful. Thank you for continuing to add insight and depth to my journey.

  • Jessica
    • Jessica
    • August 24, 2016 at 12:45 pm

    Yes, please. How do we cope with others who refuse to respect who we are, even though we made huge efforts to meet their needs? Are those relationships unsalvageable because they’re all take and no give, or is there something we can do that doesn’t make us ruder than them?

  • Taylor
    • Taylor
    • August 23, 2016 at 10:47 pm

    but, to somewhat play devil’s advocate to my own viewpoint…

    As much as I agree with the message of this podcast and fully support Antonia and Joel’s vision of greater awareness in the public, it brings up another huge elephant in the room that’s more unsavory than the intuitive superiority complex.

    That elephant is, while I certainly don’t believe intuitives are superior than sensors, we are not equal in our abilities—there are tasks which intuitives are generally better at, and certain tasks sensors are generally better at. The problem is, the tasks or professions which we as a society admire and value most are often intuitive in nature. Not all, clearly (Olympics for example), but many.

    My ESFJ sister talks constantly about how she wants to go back to university to get a Msc and frequently posts those Facebook IQ tests or brainteasers on her wall. She studied event planning, and she’s brilliant at it, and it’s the perfect profession for her. But, it’s not as highly respected as academia. I think the pull of her inferior Ti also plays a role in her desire for academic titles.

    I (INFJ) am pretty shit at all the things she is great at, and I often give her my sincere respect for her talents in her profession. But…I’m the academic in the family. I got the scholarships, high grades, acceptances to top universities. I don’t see my kind of intelligence as more important than hers, just different. But, unfortunately, she doesn’t, she sees it as “I’m better than her”. All of my family members are sensors, and in my eyes, they are all excellent at what they do (police officer, chef, salesman). My sister and much of my sensor family have projected a superiority complex onto me, the “Oh, you’re so much grander than us common folk.”. I’ve tried very hard not to, and even make a point of demeaning myself and praising their talents.

    But sometimes it feels like…if we were in 19th century Britain, I’m an upper class lady reading Philosophy at Cambridge, saying to a working class person “I am no more important than you, we both have equally valuable roles”. While that is true, it kind of sounds like bullshit to the working class person.

    On a similar thread, my boyfriend and I discuss similar issues on one aspect of gender equality. We know from MBTI the majority of women are feelers (roughly 75%). Feelers tend to excel in professions that deal with human systems. It’s not that feelers can’t excel in other professions, but they are more likely to enter professions that deal with people/human systems. But, we as a society tend to give more respect to professions that require more Thinking skills. I don’t think the answer to gender equality is pushing equal numbers in professions—people should do jobs according to their natural talents and what gives them the “flow” state. But, if the jobs that a majority of women tend to have natural talents in aren’t as respected, or well paid, they might feel they are being treated as, well, “less-than”.

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