S and N
Do opposites really attract? Absolutely. But just to make love
interesting, what attracts each partner can quickly become that which
makes each other crazy. Admit it—if you are a disorganized, habitually
late social animal who meets an organized, punctual, reserved person, your
intrigue-bells will ring so loudly you’ll miss the sound of your
subconscious calculating all the things this person will "fix"
in you. Once the thrill of your new "opposite" wears off
however, your natural tendency will be to try to fix the differences you
initially found so attractive. Truth is, as often as we are drawn to what
we lack because we understand the value difference brings to the whole of
things, we also forget its value because it takes work to truly understand
each others’ differences and appreciate them over the long-haul.
The teaching of psychiatrist C. G. Jung says that each of us has an
inherent preference for gathering and processing information about the
world, and that these preferences are the basis of personality. Jung’s
theories were introduced to the masses via the Myers-Briggs Type
Indictor® (MBTI®). The MBTI is the world’s most widely used
personality type assessment so you may already be familiar with the tool
and your four-letter personality "type." Companies frequently
use the MBTI assessment to promote a deeper understanding of style
differences among and within teams. The premise is age-old: if you take
the time to understand yourself and others, conflict is reduced and
productive relationships are increased. This applies to couples too.
When I first met my partner, I noticed a level of precision about her
speech and actions that at the time were absolutely, irresistibly
fascinating to me. Two weeks after meeting at our then mutual place of
employment, I bopped over to her desk and asked her if she wanted to grab
some lunch with me and a colleague. She looked at the clock on her
impeccably organized desk and asked what time we would be leaving, when I
thought we’d return, where we would go, and the name of the colleague
who would be joining us. At the time, I had no idea I needed to know all
of the answers before she could make a decision. I thought she just didn’t
want to seem too eager to say yes.
My partner, in Myers-Briggs speak, is a sensing type; an "S",
a person who, like 70% of the U.S. population, lives in the present and
trusts information gathered primarily through her five senses. Reality for
her exists because she can see, taste, touch, hear or smell it. She
focuses on facts and details, and is not inclined to dissect their
meanings or relationships to other things. She is Jane Friday: "Just
the facts, Ma’am." Moi? I am the opposite of an "S". I am
an "N", an intuitive, a person for whom, like 30% of the U.S.
population, reality exists because I can imagine it. I digest facts
through theoretical frameworks, possibilities, hidden meanings, and
relationships between and among things. Me: Big picture—Wanna go to
lunch? Her: Detailed picture—who, what, when, where, why?
My lack of readied (and, to me, irrelevant) information when I asked
her to lunch nine years ago seemed to indicate to her no less than total
incompetence on my part, and, sans all the facts, the creation of an
unanswerable question. Was I annoyed, intimidated or otherwise put-off?
Hell no! I was intrigued, challenged, curious. It was only week two! She
agreed to go to lunch, but only if I promised to have her back to the
office by one-fifteen p.m. sharp. How cute, I thought. Two years later I
found myself yelling things like, "Can’t you just say ‘yes’
when I ask you to lunch and trust that we’ll go somewhere we will both
like and that we’ll be back in time for your precious meeting?!"
She, in turn, no longer thought my endless stream of ideas without
attendant facts to assist her decision making process were charming and
interesting. She would say things back like, "How can I say I want to
go somewhere for lunch if I don’t know where we’re going and if I don’t
know whether I’ll be back in time for my next meeting?"
Several years into our relationship, our differences began to seem
endless. As we walked our dogs on the same route through our neighborhood,
I would make observations such as, "Well, look at that. The Simpsons
finally got a new door." And she would say, "Yes, last
August." (And she would be correct.) Often, at dinnertime, as I
explained my latest theory on something or other and how I could
eventually turn that brilliant something or other into a business, and
therefore we could move to Rehoboth full-time, I would turn to her when
the "uh huh, uh huh"s sounded too robotic, and I would realize
that instead of listening, she was reading The Washington Post. Not so
cute anymore.
I would accuse her of killing all of our dreams before they ever had a
chance to take shape much less take flight. Exacerbated, she would say,
"You have one hundred ideas a day! How am I supposed to know when to
take you seriously?" We both silently worried that perhaps the
compatibility we swore was there when we first met was slipping away. How
can my soul mate claim not to daydream? I would wonder. And she: How can I
respect someone who can’t find glasses she’s actually wearing?
It’s the day-to-day misunderstandings that, left unattended, can
erode a relationship into non-existence. By educating ourselves about
personality types, my partner and I gained another set of tools for not
only understanding each other’s differences, but for using them to make
us a better whole. Now, prior to jumping in the car to drive to my
destination, I stop and ask my partner for a "quality control
check." She runs through the list: Directions? Cell phone? Matching
earrings?
Old thought: that annoying checklist makes me feel incompetent and
makes her seem like a nag. New thought: she loves me enough to take the
time to make sure I have everything I need because usually I don’t.
Last week, I went to Atlanta to visit a friend I’ve known since
junior high school. During one of our conversations, we were discussing
our respective significant others. She asked me why I thought I enjoyed my
life with my partner so deeply. After a few minutes (okay, definitely more
than a few minutes), I heard myself summarize my numerous theories,
"She makes sense to me," I said. "Well, most of the
time."
And that’s a fact.