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A Guide
to MBTI Preferences
The following is an overview of The MBTI preference sets. Remember
that the individual preferences are components of your MBTI type. Your
MBTI type (your four letters) and the types of others are the most
useful tool in understanding yourself and others. That’s because type is
more than the sum of its components, the preferences.
Yet the preferences give extremely important insights into some of
your basic orientations in relating to others, gathering information,
making decisions, and deciding how to live your life.
The MBTI preferences are:
Extraversion ————————————Introversion
Extraversion and
Introversion are about where you draw your energy.
Extraverts draw their energy from the world of people and things.
When they are interacting with others they increase their energy. Their
gift is being able to include a great many people and events in their
lives.
Introverts draw their energy from the interior world of thoughts
and insights. They draw energy from processing events and ideas from
within. They have the gift of concentration and concentrated attention
to people and projects.
Sensing ———————————————— Intuition
Sensing and Intuition is about what is most real to you
and what you pay attention to first.
Sensors (those who prefer Sensing) experience the world through
their senses. They see an object in terms of length, weight,
composition, etc. They value data and the experience of their own lives.
They reason in an "A-Z" fashion.
Intuitives
(those who prefer Intuition) experience the world by thinking of what an
object might imply and may be uninterested in its physical
characteristics. Instead of describing a table in terms of its
dimensions, to the Intuitive that table might imply world peace, the
coming together of the nations to negotiate differences.
Thinking ————————————————Feeling
Thinking and Feeling is
about how you make decisions—especially those involving other people in
some way.
Thinkers (those who prefer Thinking) make decisions based
foremost on logic. They prefer consistency and predictability in the
decision-making process.
Feelers (those who prefer Feeling) make their decisions based
foremost on how the decision impacts individual people and groups. They
make decisions based on how well they know a person and how much they
trust them and on their personal values.
Judging ——–—–———————–———Perceiving
Judging
and Perceiving are about the way you
organize your life.
Judgers (those who prefer Judging) prefer to make their decisions
sooner rather than later. They prefer forward planning and knowing what
they will be doing as far into the future as they can. They like written
lists and completing deadlines early.
Perceivers (those who prefer Perceiving) like to make decisions
later rather than sooner, because their sense of proper timing is the
most important part of their decision-making process. They prefer to
keep their options open. They are real- time problem solvers. |