Mine, Yours, and Ours
An INFJ Confronts Marriage and Finds Herself
Khrystine Kelsey, October 16, 2019

My ESTJ husband is profoundly different from me. In our tutoring business and teaching careers, he covers math, science, and engineering, and I cover arts, social studies, and writing. This contrast is just the most superficial of our differences. We know each other very well, but we understand each other very little. He says I lack common sense while I am baffled at his inability to pick up on social cues. I know some things bother him, but I cannot understand why they matter; there are things he does to bother me, and I don’t understand why he seems surprised when my response is exactly the same every time he does them. We have had very hard times, and in fights we can be mean, but we also trust each other more than many couples I have seen. We both prioritize our relationship above others, and we keep each other close—both literally and figuratively. Originally, I had intended to explore these dynamics through our respective psychological types. However, in exploring our relationship, I discovered how many expectations and judgments I bring to our relationship based on my own type. These challenges are not immune to the type of my partner but also exist independently of him.


He has a point. Si is in my eighth position—what Beebe calls the demonic/daimonic position. Functions in this position tend to undermine our conscious plans in ways that are very distressing and even destructive. Beebe described this “demonic personality” as “a beastly part of myself that nevertheless can occasionally be an uncanny source for the infusion of redemptive spirit into my dealings with myself and others” (2006, p. 42). In practice, Si demonic means that I “ignore financial and/or bodily health,” and my memory tends to “exaggerate insults, mistakes, and embarrassing moments” (Shumate, in press). A simpler way to think of it is that all those things Saeed is good at and finds valuable, I am bad at. I am not very good with my sensing function in general; even my egosyntonic version is my inferior function. Furthermore, that sensing function is extraverted sensation (Se), which is present-oriented and doesn’t want to be “fenced in” (C. Shumate, lecture, 2019). Saeed wants to be a homeowner with a wife who knows how to keep house. I want to live in a hotel so someone else can clean up after me and I can check in and out any time.
Saeed is not overly traditional about gender roles, or at least not dogmatically so. He expects to help around the house, respects my education, and never makes me feel like a “good wife” should be at home. However, we were both raised in patriarchal cultures, and he has the double bias of being the privileged male and having highly developed Si. Megan Malone (2017) pointed out:
The ESTJ may feel like the INFJ isn’t doing their part to provide or take care of practical things at home. In relationships with male ESTJs and female INFJs, this relationship can quickly take on stereotypical gender norms, which may seem natural for the ESTJ but be a source of resentment for the INFJ. (p. 24)

I am also judgmental of Saeed, and while it is hard for me to imagine, perhaps my judgement pains him as much as his judgment crushes me. Coming to accept that I am judgmental has been strange for me. After all, I am so “nice.” I am “accepting.” I think there are a few reasons my judgment is less obvious than Saeed’s. First, Saeed’s judging function, extraverted thinking (Te), is his hero function. It is the first thing he does. My judging function is auxiliary extraverted feeling (Fe). Second, he is an extravert and I am an introvert. In general, my energy orientation makes me appear slower, and I am less likely to share my judgments. Third, thinking judges impersonally while feeling judges contextually. Feeling judgment is a slower process because the specific context has to be considered, not just the rules, system, or law as it exists. I perceive something with my dominant introverted intuition (Ni), then evaluate it (Fe), and only then will I consider expressing my opinion if it is contextually appropriate. Saeed talks as he’s thinking and does this in order to process his perceptions.
Myers said that the biggest relationship problem she happened to see in her practice was the conflict between those making thinking and feeling judgments. They seemed to have the hardest time communicating (Myers & Myers, 1980/1993). I suspect this difficulty has more to do with the fact that thinking and feeling are judging functions than that they are any more oppositional than the other pairs we see in the theory. That judgment matters, especially if it is immediately apparent. If I do something foolish (usually having to do with my inferior sensation) and Saeed insults me for it, I get very angry. I am not just angry because my pride is hurt, although that is a factor. I am angry that he does not see that insulting one’s wife is a foolish thing to do. I am angry that he values whatever “thing” I just “ruined” over our relationships, my happiness, my feelings, me! I am angry that he would rather have a fight and make us both feel bad than just clean up the mess, repair the break, or do whatever needs to be done. I may have done something stupid, but he is making it worse, and that is even more stupid!
My reasons for my anger are reasonable—they make sense, they’re coherent, and they may even be “true.” But they are also all feeling judgments. Every single one of my reasons is based on value judgments, context, and the preference for harmony over discord. A thinker’s judgment is based on none of those things. “X” is a foolish thing to do and should be known as such, regardless of who is doing it, where they are, or why. It is “a universal law which must be put into effect everywhere all the time” (Jung, 1921/2014, ¶585).

Jung said we should not try to force someone’s lower functions into consciousness. Regardless of any moral considerations, it just doesn’t work (Jung, 1921/2014, ¶670). Nothing makes me want to run away from marriage like the idea of being a traditional housewife, and if Saeed could suddenly understand my intense feelings, he would likely be overwhelmed. If he actually felt as unworthy as I admittedly want him to feel at times, he might tell me I deserve better and leave. I’ve played that scenario with men before. I believe this pattern occurs due to my introverted feeling (Fi) being in my sixth “bad parent” position and my extraverted thinking (Te) falling in the trickster position. Introverted feeling in this position tends to set impossible standards while extraverted thinking as trickster often results in attempts to take control having the opposite of the desired effect (Shumate, in press).
When this understanding first dawned, I felt vaguely angry about all this—angry that I wasn’t a better housewife and that Saeed wasn’t more understanding about it, angry that Saeed wasn’t more in touch with his feelings or mine, angry that the theory seemed to suggest that we don’t understand each other and never will, angry that I want to be understood. I also recognized that I was emotional for other reasons. I had just written very demanding exams for my Ph.D., my bank account was negative because I had not worked much due to the aforementioned exams, and I felt very over-extraverted upon tending to the needs of my students at the beginning of the academic year.
The more I study psychological type, however, the more validation and insight I find. Interestingly, I related to a lot of the experiences ENFJs described in the informal communications I had with them and I have even reported an ENFJ type on online personality tests. I am definitely an introvert, but my extraverted feeling is strongly developed. ENFJs have the same top two functions as INFJs but in reverse order. They lead with their extraverted feeling and follow with their introverted intuition. Lenore Thomson’s description of an INFJ describes how I experience myself while her description of an ENFJ describes how I actually live my life (1998). Myers compared the dominant function to a general and the auxiliary function to his second-in-command. In an extraverted personality, the general is on the battlefield calling the shots. In an introverted personality, the general is in his tent, still leading but rarely visible; rather, the second-in-command relays messages to the troops and appears to be the one taking action (Myers & Myers, 1980/1993).

For an ENFJ (or distorted INFJ), intuitions that contradict one’s feeling judgments may be ignored (Thomson, 1998, p. 340). For example, many times I have been disinterested in doing something and felt as if my whole body is dragging me away from it. Usually, this reaction involves someone asking me to substitute for them when I have already been working a lot, or acquaintances (not close friends) making social invitations, but it has also happened when close friends or family have asked for help with something. I can’t say no, so I say yes, but something negative invariably ends up happening: I get sick afterward, I’m left somewhere unfamiliar without a ride, whatever I am supposed to be helping the friend with ends up not working, etc. My intuition knows this but I cannot rationalize it.

Inferior extraverted sensation simply looks for ways to escape (Thomson, 1998). Indeed, when my extraverted feeling function burns out, I fantasize about running away, being all on my own, and having no responsibility to anyone but myself. It’s not a pleasant fantasy, however, even if it sounds ideal for a moment. Apart from the self-criticism and guilt I feel for having it, I begin to wonder if the only way for me to get my needs met is to be alone. Is there something wrong with me? Am I just not meant to have love, friendship, and festivity? Von Franz (1971/2013) described the inferior function as “the door through which all the figures of the unconscious come” (p. 72). Indeed, as I slip through the door of my escape fantasy, I find myself again faced with my shadows, witches, tricksters, and demons: I can’t pull myself together to care for others; I am so selfish that it is better I don’t even try, and so on.
Thomson (1998) described how the extraverted feeling type becomes controlling, demanding, and perfectionistic when extraverted feeling is wearing thin: “Their relationships aren’t mutual. … But the problem isn’t people’s ungrateful receipt of their efforts. It’s the EFJ’s insistence on controlling others’ behaviors, the impossible standards they’ve set as evidence of people’s devotion” (p. 345-346). I wrote in the margin, “Do I do this?” Yet I know I do. I have seen myself be rigid, controlling, and judgmental—angry that I cannot say no. I have seen myself indulge in unhealthy or irresponsible behaviors, sometimes even being secretive about them, in order to reward myself for working so hard. I have seen myself neglect my own needs simply to keep from inconveniencing someone and then felt betrayed when they do not do the same. I have made myself sick to get out of things. And for what? Because it is better to be physically sick than to destroy the image I think others have of me as responsible, charming, and helpful? An image I don’t even know they have? By being selfless, I become selfish. By being open, I close myself off. By being nice, I become a real bitch. The problem of opposites isn’t in my marriage—it’s in myself. As I said, faking it is a large part of how I survive.
Thomson (1998) said the following about EFJs:
[They] experience their very real desires for space, relaxation, and self-interest as weaknesses to be overcome. This is what makes their relationships unequal. They unwittingly assume a position of superiority, as though they were intended by fate to [c]ompanion others, without needs, flaws, feelings, and potential of their own. (p. 348)
Indeed, from the time I was a little girl, watching my mother cater to my father, hearing what made a good wife in church, listening to stories like Cinderella and Persephone, it seemed like there were only two options: sacrifice or isolation. Keeping in mind that I am actually an introvert, isolation often seems preferable. Thomson advised that burnt-out EJs (or IJs with burnt-out EJ functions) should tap back into their perceiving functions. They can take a break from organizing or evaluating the external world and pay more attention to the information flowing from the internal one.

I started to feel my mood lighten and gradually grow more vibrant. If these impossible standards were all in my head and if I was actually becoming hurtful, deceptive, and selfish because I refused to take care of myself, maybe I really didn’t have to keep sacrificing myself. Perhaps if I trusted myself and let my intuition lead me before making value judgments, I wouldn’t be so tired. I was somewhat aware that I was tricking myself into this: I have to be more selfish for the good of the community! Yet it clicked, and this time the trickster was my ally. It is vital that I nourish my intuition.
If Saeed is the extraverted thinker, perhaps I should just let him be the extraverted thinker. I do not mean this in terms of allowing him to “carry” my non-preferred functions as von Franz warned against. Rather, I mean my feelings and evaluations don’t need to compete with his thinking and organizations. I don’t need to impose order and rigidity to protect my feelings and keep my introversion from being overwhelmed; I just need to take space. I need to care for myself.
Saeed is not a feeling type, and he does not say “I love you” often. His usual good-bye is the much more practical “Take care.” Once in a while—before I leave for the airport, when I’m sick, or when one or both of us is worried—his voice is softer, and his tone is different. I know when he says “Take care” like this, the words mean “I love you.”
For both our sakes, I will do as he instructs.
References
Beebe, J. (2006). Evolving the eight-function model. Australian Psychological Type Review, 8(1), 39-43.
Jung, C. G. (2014). The collected works of C. G. Jung (Complete digital ed., Vol. 6). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. (Original work published 1921)
Malone, M. (2017). INFJs in love. INFJBlog.com.
Myers, I. B., & Myers, P. B. (1993). Gifts differing: Understanding personality type (Kindle ed.). Palo Alto, CA: CPP Books. (original work published 1980)
Shumate, M. C. (in press). The eight-function model of personality type: Jung, Beebe, and projection. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge.
Shumate, C. (2019). The eight Jungian functions [Lecture]. Pacifica Graduate Institute, July 4-10, Carpinteria, CA.
Thomson, L. (1998). Personality type: An owner’s manual (Kindle ed.). Boston, MA: Shambhala.
von Franz, M.-L. (2013). The inferior function. In M.-L. von Franz & J. Hillman, Lectures on Jung’s typology. Putnam, CT: Spring Publications. (Original work published 1971)
Images
Baziotes, W. (1962). Untitled. Retrieved from wikiart.org
Du Toit, P. (2003). Transparency. Retrieved from wikiart.org
Hodler, F. (1900). Emotion. Retrieved from wikiart.org
Kustodiev, B. (1920). Merry go round. Retrieved from wikiart.org
Matisse, H. (1917). Sun’s ray. Retrieved from wikiart.org
Rothko, M. (1952). No. 8. Retrieved from wikiart.org
Zabeleta, R. (n.d.). A kiss. Retrieved from wikiart.org
















What a fascinating exploration of a relationship through typology. Thanks so much!
Hello–at this point we had been married 6 years. Sorry for my delay in replying!
Are you guys newly married or a few years into it?
The comparison between the two types shows a form of “opposites”. The most preferred functions for one type and in the shadow of the other type. I love the comment that we know each other but don’t understand each other.