Tag: Q&A (Page 1 of 3)

Sorry, Not Sorry (Where We’ve Been and Novel!)

Hi there aLBoP peoples.  A lot of you have probably wondered “are they still doing that personality thing anymore?  Seriously, they haven’t posted literally anything since a global pandemic hit.  And I was stuck at home a lot during that.  Guys, for once I probably would have wanted to read something that was tens of thousands of words long, and that was exactly when you didn’t post anything!  Think how much the algorithms would have been in your favor if you had churned stuff out when people were stuck at home and wanted to understand themselves and the people they were locked in their houses with!”

Maybe you didn’t think any of that.  Maybe that’s just what I think when I stop posting things and get scared everyone moves on to something newer, sparklier, with better laid out menus and much better grammatical correctness.  (That was supposed to be a case-in-point joke, but maybe that’s technically grammatically correct?  Beats me.)

But you may have wondered where we went, because we get a lot of emails wondering where we went, and we’ve hardly posted any posts on this site in several years.  Not like we were ever in the running for frequent or consistent update awards.

I mean, there’s plenty here to read, because Justin (my INFJ) and I are both quite wordy, to our occasional shame.  And there’s so much content here that isn’t elsewhere, and with so many words, we very much encourage rereading.  But so much is half-shared, half-revealed, and we understand if that’s frustrating.

We certainly haven’t forgotten that none of the FPs and TJs, except for INTJs, have Type Hero posts yet.  (Guys, I’ve had the quotes for all 16 picked since 2013!  It kills me too!! 😩)

Or that I said in a video in 2014 that we’d unveil Facial Typing by the end of the year.  Ha.  Well we’ve talked about it lots of places, and we’ve been using it for Typings since… I don’t remember honestly.  Quite a few years.  It works on everybody, and it just proves more consistent all the time.  Anytime I get imposter syndrome, which is pretty frequently, I look back and I’m like “But wait, people who are now among my very best friends, I was able to predict their deepest fears, and desires from their faces alone, before I knew them at all.”

Like there’s an ENTP(ij) in Brazil that literally sent us a picture of his face, with no words or anything.  Without facial typing, I wouldn’t have guessed ENTP(ij) from the photo or the few interactions we’d had before that point.  Now he’s a great friend and runs our Twitter and makes us crack up all the time, in such an Expectable Reactions way, working like a champ on his Megamind Complex.  (Sorry to pick on you, buddy 😉 I won’t mention his name, although he’s likely not to mind.)

Where was I going with that?  I derailed myself.  Oh, where we’ve been.  Basically we didn’t forget or give up on this A Little Bit of Personality site, the cognition site, or “Phase 1” as we affectionately call it.  Nor did we run out of content.  Ha. Ha ha ha ha ha.  No sir.

Nor did we stop writing, which is really the intent of this post.

People who haven’t read any of aLBoP Phase 2, or the few posts he’s written here on Phase 1, sometimes don’t know that Justin writes for aLBoP at all.  Some people even think he’s quiet, or doesn’t have a lot to say 🤣.  This amuses (and occasionally irks) me.

I mean, it’s fine if people just don’t know.  And a lot of people probably don’t know that he wrote 98% of the COGs.

Sometimes I also get a little moody because whenever people tell us their favorite aLBoP quotes, 99% of those are from the COGs, so most of the time it’s something Justin wrote, not me, and I get dramatic “does my writing even matter and is it any good?!” feels.  But it’s okay, because we’ve developed these many tools that we use on our own feels, on the daily.  Also he really is a phenomenally powerful writer, so I’m really happy when people praise him.  I did all the pictures for the COGs though!  Well, and I was the primary discoverer of the cognition steps, and how that works, etc.  It’s not like I didn’t do plenty for them.  It’s just very obviously his prose.  We tag team good.

But anyone who has read a fraction of “What is Smart?” or any of the Phase 2 intro, or any of the Phase 2/Phase 2-Intro posts knows my boy is eloquent AF, if you’ll pardon the expression.  Also, so much wordier than I am.  And I find tens of thousands of words to elaborate on the deeper, applicable meanings of scary shows and rock bands.

But Justin can talk for literal days about what the 1939 German invasion of Poland has to do with your life right now, or how to know if you’re going into emotional debt and why it’s taking a bigger toll on your life than you realize, or the 4Toi of emotion.

And he does.  No joke, I’m thousands of messages behind on group chat conversations he’s had on topics like that.  When he talks, he just goes.  And while I tease him about tangents and getting off topic, because he certainly does that, everything he says is toward something, with something new to add to every single topic I’ve ever heard him talk about.  Yes, I’m bragging.  I’m allowed to do that after being married for 13.5 years and being constantly re-impressed with him.  And no, I’m not going to let him edit this part, even if he’s shy about me saying all this about him. [Justin: SAYS YOU, YOU FOOL! I EDIT! By writing this here]

But none of those thousands and thousands of words he writes regularly are *here*, on Phase 1.  So people just have no clue.  Most of his writing is for Full Phase 2, and while we’re planning to let a bunch more people into Full Phase 2 (I hope before long), and while the awesome people who have applied have waited such a long time for us… still at the moment, it’s hidden to all but a few dozen people.

Likewise, although I am not as fast a writer as Justin, by a long shot 😩 (which he’ll “😛” about me saying, since I get mean to myself), I still write 12-15 thousand words in an average month, I’d estimate.  *They’re just not here.*

Lately, for me, they’re fiction.  But as Justin is fond of saying, “A good story is worth a thousand lectures.”  There’s a reason that Sensing and iNtuition are equal functions, that we all need both of: Concepts are not enough on their own.  Everyone needs Experience.  And sure, we can stumble through life, requiring to have every experience ourselves before we learn and apply things.  Or, we can learn from what other people have been through, be it history or fantasy, as long as those stories mirror reality.  Sci-fi and fantasy don’t “not count,” so long as they reflect all four Types of Information accurately.  In fact, sometimes suspending real life rules, we can find the beautiful universal truths underneath them, seeing sides of things and people that we might not get to otherwise.  We can learn vicariously through situations we might never experience on our own, and that shows us things about others and ourselves that we’d likely not find alone.

Basically, long story short, I’ve been spending the majority of my writing time on the story of a boy with good motives and terrible decisions (no, he’s not an EP, shockingly. Js can make terrible decisions too, believe it or not 😉), who is forced down a path to discover who his “self” really is, when the whole world, and seemingly circumstances, tell him that selfness is fleeting and changeable.

So, I’m really truly sorry that there haven’t been new cognition posts, to help carry you through a global pandemic, with new heights of domestic violence, uncertainty and hopelessness, that many of us weren’t used to in our lives before that.  Please believe that a day doesn’t go by that I don’t think about how many are searching for lights at the ends of tunnels, not new, but certainly not improved by world events the last few years.  And maybe I did write a 20k word post about Hope and Depression, about 3.5 months before the pandemic hit, that you could have/can now go read, to help, I hope… I’m still sorry it wasn’t just cognition tools, and I’m even more sorry if you felt left alone in the cold.

I’m sorry we take a really long time to reply to Typing orders sometimes.  We do really care, both about you having the vulnerability to email us about yourself, and pictures of your face, and that you give us your valuable resources in exchange.  We do really appreciate people paying for typings.  I am going to throw out there that if we were in this for the money, we would be really really stupid to go about it this way.  Like epic levels of stupid and arrogant.  Which we’ve been called, so, just sayin’.  We still do typings, fyi for the people who worry when we take a while to reply.  They’re just not the primary thing we do under the umbrella of “aLBoP.”

My mom had a sweet friend who wanted to buy a t-shirt recently, after I typed her, and I was embarrassed that when I looked, I had the wrong URL for the shirt website.  That’s how long it had been since I had given thought to people buying t-shirts, long enough for Spreadshirt to change how their URLs work.  (And have a data-leak, so I’m sorry if you got an email about needing to change your password and stuff.)  It’s just not the priority right now, at all.  (That being said, if you still want a t-shirt, here’s the updated URL, lol.  I haven’t changed links anywhere else.  I’m fully aware they’re wrong, I just have other things to do.)

It’s not that teaching you about cognition isn’t important.  That’s not why there haven’t been more posts.  It’s not that I hate popularity and money, or milking the easy algorithm of “MBTI” or other topics people *actually search for.*  It’s that we are two individual people, trying to build an undersea city, and Phase 1 sees the spire of the tallest building, and thinks that’s all we have.  I’m sorry if the paint job on the tower is scuffed.  But I’m a little busy building Atlantis with my scuba gear.  Is that an arrogant analogy?  Probably!  But I don’t got time for modesty for the sake of appearances either.

You know how most social apps recommend stuff to you, based on what you’ve already read/watched/listened to?  They have whole apps based on that concept, recommending stuff you’ll like, based on stuff you already like.  It’s like a more surface level version of Sources (of using Perceiving to know who to trust and listen to).  That’s all I’m doing with this post:

“So you like A Little Bit of Personality?  If you like that, you’ll probably like…”

Except in this case, I’m saying if you like this website, because it makes things feel clear, because you can find things here that you’ve never found anywhere else, and they work—not just in theory or concept, but *in practice*—and you want more; if you keep checking back because what we said made the clouds part, and you want to experience that again, then we’ve got more where that came from.  Not right here, not solely about cognition, and some of it gated—never financially, but by a demonstration of applying what we shared to that point—but guys, we have so much more where that came from.

And I’d recommend, on your tour of a much larger aLBoP world, (before the Phase 2 Intro, if you haven’t read that yet) your next stop be A Little Bit of Calise and Barry Anderson: An Unexpected Fairy Tale.  Read the Foo Fighters post about hope, and my silly Sides posts, and consider if you have aspects of your selfness that need some love.  And I have just posted the second chapter of Barry Anderson, my novel that I’m posting one chapter at a time.  (I also just posted the audiobook version of the first chapter, and the “soundtrack” songs that go with the first two chapters, and commentary about them.  Because I’m extra like that.)

It’s about fairies.  And gender.  And selfness.  And becoming the best version of yourself, while still being you—which has always been the entire goal of this website.  Why is that worth taking years away from posting about cognition?  (Even though over 250k words of Barry, so far, are far from all I’ve been doing the last few years, it’s still been my most central project, I’d say.  *Disclaimer*: Two chapters aren’t most of that word count… well, okay, they’re 41k together, but the plot has barely even started by the end of Chapter 2!!  (For scale, the *longest* chapter of Harry Potter is 9,001 words.  I’m so sorry.))

But yeah, let me repeat the question:  Why is a comedy story about fairy godmothers worth leaving people without the help that understanding cognition might provide?  Because, despite my constant argument with myself, Barry Anderson is *not* just a silly, mildly scandalous novel, in a genre that’s basically “Shakespeare Comedy meets 80’s Teen Flick,” although it certainly is all of those things.  Not that I’m doubting the emotional power of Twelfth Night, A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream, Better Off Dead, or Back to the Future, which I study with rapture, from the hands of story lords.  But mine is written with the same purpose as this website.

My first novel, “completed” on my sixteenth birthday, had a few different names over my teen years.  I felt like I had to call it something cool or no one would want to read it.  As a teenager, I didn’t feel like I could just call a story “Ellic.”  It had to be “The Kingdom Chronicles: A Hope for Identity”, with “The Kingdom Chronicles” being the series title, and “A Hope for Identity” being that particular story.  This was later replaced by “The Dallanian Kingdom Chronicles: Ellic’s Story”, which ain’t half bad, so I don’t know if any of that will stay when I rewrite it later.  But most of the time I just call it “Ellic.”

I’ve come to embrace the fact that all my stories are first and foremost character stories, and almost* all of my elevenish active stories are named for the protagonist(s).  So the title is literally one or two protagonist names, or a name that describes the protagonist group.  (*Okay, there are two exceptions.  I forgot those at first, and changed my wording, lol.  But those are named for the central plot-nouns that involve the characters changing.)

But “Barry Anderson: A Hope for Identity” would probably be even more fitting than the title would have been for Ellic (although they’re both sixteen-year-old INFJ(j)s.  Paradoxitype and stuff!  Don’t judge!).  Identity is a humanity battleground, and honestly I’m tired of all arguments on all sides of such issues.  I’m tired of so many of the arguments related to central questions of human nature, being groups of people flinging feces in the dark.

Do you want to know who you are?  Are you tired of other people defining that, badly?  Does aLBoP help you feel like you can find your forever-self, while not capping anything about who that person can be?  Well have I got the story for you! 😉

It’s not a children’s story, despite having a lot of fairies, tutus, glitter and rhymes.  You could play a drinking game with the number of mammary euphemisms there are (some of which I’m exceedingly proud of).  But it’s got heart; a lot of raw, exposed, vulnerable heart.  And I think that’s what the world needs right now, along with themes about choice, change, plans, hope, and “the jewel of each soul.”

So, I guess, TL;DR: We’ve been gone because we were prioritizing other parts of aLBoP, never because we didn’t care, or gave up.  And I’m sharing one of my novels, and it’s fun and you should, like, totally read it!  It has the same objectives as this website, so if you’re into that kinda thing, then it’ll be your jam.

Although if you really didn’t read this because this post was too long, this probably won’t be your favorite website ever, heads-up.  You probably won’t like our other websites, sorry.  You can be excused.

Anyway, I realized I never said over here that I had posted any of my fiction, so sorry if anyone wanted to read it and just didn’t know!  Hey, if you would, comment below about how you see when we update, so I can try and use those methods more.

Not just saying, really true:
<3 Much love,
Calise

aLBoP is not MBTI

Hey, it’s Justin!  So…this post has words in it.  It’s written with words.  I’m typing words right now, with the strange expectation that words can communicate thoughts and ideas.  It’s odd, and it hasn’t seemed to work very well so far.  Yet maybe, there’s a faint chance that typing a few more words might be able to communicate something to somebody.

A Little Bit of Personality is not Myers-Briggs Type Indicator.  We say so right there in the intro video…and in lots of posts on here, posts with words.  We started there, as we’ve said before, because we were just having fun and we, like so many, presumed that MBTI was a reliable, scientific system.  Yet as we’ve said before, we gradually came to see more and more ways in which MBTI is inconsistent, in which it does not work, in which it encourages and even relies on stereotypes and superficial simplifications of people.  And what was worse, we started to see that many, many people apparently wanted those stereotypes and simplifications.

We started to see how much “personality typing” was used as a petty weapon in infantile campaigns to put down anyone whose mind worked differently.  We cringed more and more whenever we saw four-by-four grids that listed insultingly shallow sets of qualities for each of the sixteen types, and which portrayed some types as clearly better, smarter, more reliable, more successful, more creative, more visionary, more concrete, more compassionate, more practical, or simply of greater worth and value than the others.  Personality typing had become a shallow and subjective mudfight through which people tried to compensate for their own unresolved personal insecurities by putting down others who made them feel inadequate.  Apparently, there are a lot of second-graders online who are quite skilled at writing up passive-aggressive four-by-four grids.

So we went back to the beginning, because we knew there was so much good here!  We, like so many of you guys, had gotten excited about personality typing for a reason.  It was exciting to see how our minds worked, and how others’ minds did too.  It was so cool to try to figure out the personality types of fictional characters, or of historical figures or celebrities we liked.  But now that we had seen how personality typing had become such a putrid and subjective cesspool, we had to go back to the basics to figure out what was good and what was brain-damaging.

We’ve talked about this before, in several posts that use words.  We’ve described how a clarification of basic definitions is one of the first indispensable steps in any effort to replace subjectivity with objectivity.  We’ve talked about how we didn’t have to throw out the baby with the poisonous bathwater, and so we were able to use the brilliant original work done by Carl Jung and by Katharine Cook Briggs and her daughter Isabel Briggs Myers (all of whom died long before the internet), without the simplified dangers of modern MBTI.  On aLBoP Phase 2, we go into far greater depth about our scientific process, how we were able to clarify definitions that made Cognitive Typing into a reliable and repeatable hard science, rather than a subjective and dubious soft-science.  But all those posts use words, words that invite you guys to see “Hey wait, this is different. This isn’t what I thought I already knew.”

A Little Bit of Personality is part of a larger endeavor, which we call our “Twenty-Five Year Plan,” a plan to simply help make life better for as many people as we can.  As I’m writing today, we’re a bit more than eleven years in, on the fourth of eight stages.  This is all stuff that’s explained in depth on the full Phase 2 site.  It’s really exciting to us, and though we did not initially expect to use Cognitive Typing or anything like it as a tool in this plan, aLBoP has become a powerful way for us to reach and help so many awesome people!  Yet originally, we didn’t plan to have Phase 2 be a separate website; we were just going to put all the information right here on one site, for all the internet to see.  We’re very glad now that we didn’t.

There is nothing secret on any of our sites, and all the information on all three of our sites (Phase 1 here, Phase 2 Intro, and full Phase 2) is all completely free of charge.  But we realized that we had to separate our content into multiple sites when we saw the bizarre and aggressively cruel reactions of so many people to even the comparatively basic concepts of Cognitive Typing.  I’m not referring to insightful and engaging questions; for instance, a lot of cool people have asked very good questions, like “How do you have a large enough sample size to make sure your conclusions are accurate?” “Why don’t you submit to scientific journals?” “What exactly is your experimental process?” etc.  Those sorts of thoughtful questions are the sort of thing that we’ve had to save for the later websites, because we realized that even the introductory information here on Phase 1 seems to be far too much for some people to read.  Too many words.

We wanted an engaging and active forum where we could talk back and forth with people, instead of only posting articles on a website, but it soon became clear that if we went ahead and put a forum here on Phase 1, open to the internet, then any potential discussion would be buried under arrogant assertions and bitter argument.  In fact, when we started a forum on Phase 2, it was astonishing how rapidly that happened, how quickly it became a toxic atmosphere where thoughtful, intelligent people grew ever more wary to post anything.  If we didn’t do something, our forum was going to become yet another place on the internet where the discourse was dominated by the bone-headedly obnoxious.

As I’m writing this, I have an online game open in the background, where one of my characters is happily crafting food for me.  But I usually play most games with the general chat channels turned off, because while there are a lot of sweet and helpful people in a lot of games, the general chat channels tend to get dominated by the least common denominator.  When we first started our Phase 2 forum, some people were convinced that it couldn’t possibly be any different from anywhere else on the internet, calling us naive for trying to create a place online where people could feel safe to freely share ideas, where the thoughtful majority didn’t have to remain silent or risk setting off the irrational blowhards.  Yet now, on the full Phase 2 site, we have an awesome and active realtime chat forum where everyone feels safe to think, to work through problems, to discuss ideas, to share their lives and make precious friendships.  I’m actually making them wait right now while I write this, but Calise and I thought that this little post was worth taking the time for.  Yet that forum would have been impossible if we hadn’t first created a safe place insulated from the wild, aggressively-asserted opinions and jaw-dropping simplifications on the internet.

We wanted to put all of it on one website, and perhaps we could have, were it not for the apparent fact that the current culture of the internet trains us not to read.  Trains us not to think.  Not to stop and digest.  Not to sit back and make sure we understand things before moving on.  And it certainly seems to train people to post comments before, you know, reading.  We wanted to do videos as well as posts, and we did make a few before moving them away to Phase 2.  We wanted to do podcasts, which are a ton of fun but we only do them for Phase 2.  This is not meant to be an advertisement for Phase 2 (especially because we are very, very, very behind on responding to Phase 2 invites, really sorry about that!), but rather a challenge to read what’s here on Phase 1.  If people can’t do that, then how could they possibly read more anyway?

It’s gotten to the point that I wasn’t sure I should even take the time to write this, because I wondered who would read it?  Not that we don’t have plenty of traffic, but I wondered how many people would do more than skim.  One of our closest friends, whom we met through aLBoP, told us that when he first stumbled across Phase 1, it was a real shock to him because he had to slow down to really understand it all.  He told us that he had grown accustomed to being able to skim most things online, that most articles were fairly simple ideas expressed in way too many words, so he’d gotten used to skimming.  But with aLBoP, he had to seriously re-adjust his expectations; he had to take time and think about the content.  Another of our friends, upon reading the first Super Simple Series post, said “That’s not simple at all!”  We’ve done our best, heh, and we hope that it really is pretty simple and straightforward, but it is also new stuff, not just the same old familiar repetition, so it can’t be simply skimmed.

A couple weeks ago, someone walked up to me and declared that I was an INFP.  I tried to be diplomatic and inviting, telling him that I’d be interested to hear what made him say so, and I asked what definitions of the letters he was using.  He seemed confused and a bit bothered by the question, and said he was just using MBTI.  I still don’t know what made him think that he could so confidently assert someone else’s type like that.  Of course, on aLBoP we do quite confidently assert the Cognitive Types of both real and fictional people, but we can only do so as a result of using concrete, clear definitions that leave no subjective wiggle-room.  There’s no uncertainty about whether someone is a Cognitive Introvert or Extravert; the definitions are very clear, they leave no room for fudging or gray areas, yet they are also not the same soft and elastic definitions of current MBTI.  We have said so, over and over, using words.  And yet we still get comments by people unilaterally asserting “Nope, you typed that character wrong,” based on definitions that we are not using, definitions we cannot use for reasons that we have explained repeatedly.

The problem is in the assertiveness, the astounding certainty with which people treat their own points of view as objective fact.  There’s nothing wrong with asking questions, with re-examining and re-questioning over and over, with constantly re-checking and revisiting even the things that seem the most well established.  Sometimes you might find a mistake, like the time on the Phase 2 Typing Library, when I accidentally put ESTP(ep) Usain Bolt on the library pages for two different Cognitive Types because his picture had somehow got copied over into the wrong folder.  Just this morning, someone pointed out a typo where I had said “our” when I meant “or.”  And we get so many sweet comments where people ask questions rather than assert opinions as fact.  “Why did you type Gandalf as an F instead of a T?” shows a mind that wants to think, to understand, to hear feedback and decide whether or not it makes sense.  Yet when someone flippantly comments “No, Gandalf is INTJ like me,” then that shows such a closed unwillingness to question or examine one’s own point of view.  No wonder current politics are such a nasty echo-chamber.

So when people assertively tell us “I’m an ENTJ,” “I’m a Ne dom,” etc, it makes us wonder if they’ve really read much of anything before commenting.  We do not use the simplistic “dom” system because it turned out to be tremendously subjective, with apparent “dominance” depending far too much on potentially cherry-picked factors that are all too easily used to weigh the result toward a preferred conclusion.  As someone once said to us, and as we’ve quoted before, “Personality typing is just horoscopes for people who think they’re too smart for horoscopes.”  In other words, it’s all subjective fluff that can be applied equally well to anyone, of any type, as long as people are eager to adolescently define themselves in a way that parodies the real work of finding oneself.

But then, as soon as we mention that, we get sincere comments telling us that astrology is real too.  Perhaps it is, perhaps it is not; personally, I have seen many, many reasons to believe it is not accurate or reliable in any fashion, while I have not yet seen anything to suggest the contrary, so far.  Yet I have to wonder: what makes someone feel equipped to say that astrology definitively does work, or does not?  As soon as we start treating our own personal experiences as universal truths, as soon as we start treating our own opinions as objective facts, and as soon as we make the incredibly self-centered error of saying “I have no experience of such-and-such, therefore it’s crap,” then we shut off our ability to think, to learn, to approach anything in any sort of rational manner.  That quote about personality typing being mere horoscopes in disguise, displays its own form of narrow and lazy thinking, by asserting that all “personality typing” is this way, painting life with such a broad brush.  It’s this sort of simplistic thinking that leads to racism, sexism, or any other form of prejudice, that says “I’ve seen dumb religions, therefore all religions are dumb,” “I’ve known vile men, therefore all men are vile,” “I only hang around with dishonest people…and I am one myself…therefore nobody is honest,” etc.  It’s a lazy and anecdotal simplification of the complexities of people’s lives, hearts, and hopes.  It’s mean.

But just because the internet trains us to make everything simplistic and skimmable, just because the current online culture trains us to view our own personal opinions as objective fact, that doesn’t make it our fault.  We can learn to see outside our own points of view.  We can learn to recognize the powerful lenses of emotion, pain, and desire which skew and distort how we see every experience that happens to us.  We can explore just how not objective we are, and then learn to grow past that subjective isolation.

This is why Calise and I have had to de-prioritize Phase 1 for a long time, though.  We’ve been working feverishly, constantly, but most of it has not been here on Phase 1.  We did put eight months of work into The People of Stranger Things post, we put so much thought and feeling into it, so much care and planning, for a total of more than fifty thousand words.  There’s a lot of great stuff in there, but it has produced hardly any results.  How can we justify prioritizing the addition of more information here on Phase 1, when people repeatedly show us how little they’ve read of what we’ve already written?

We love our Personalized Typing service, we love seeing people’s faces and hearing about their lives, we love connecting with them, and it’s a great way to find thoughtful, good, decent people.  And yet, over and over, it’s an uphill battle to remind people who order typings that we are not MBTI, that we do not use those definitions, as we’ve said so many times in so many posts.  Whenever we send out a typing, we always caution people that if they look up their Cognitive Type online, then they are going to find things that are very different, and likely demeaning and limiting.  And yet we still get replies of people saying “No I can’t be this type, because here’s what MBTI says about it, and that’s not me.”  The Cognitive Orientation Guidebooks, which we package with each typing, spend a fair amount of time explaining and reiterating precisely how each Cognitive Type is different from the popular stereotypes. We really hoped words would get that across.

Yet we know what the internet culture is like, and we know that sometimes we all need to be reminded that it’s okay to slow down and process thoughts instead of living life through reactions.  Sometimes I find it intriguing to hop between news networks as they cover the same story, to see how differently each network portrays the very same events.  Which bits of video do they show, which do they edit out, and which do they repeat endlessly?  Which adjectives and adverbs do they use, to influence viewers’ conclusions?  What information do they focus on, what information do they downplay, and what information do they conveniently fail to mention entirely?  Like the proverbial blind men and the elephant, the same event and the same data can be interpreted in wildly different ways even when people have the most honest of intentions.  So when people are less honest, when people have an agenda, a worldview, an ideology or attitude that they want to push, how much more careful do we have to be before we draw any sort of confident conclusions?

It’s our hope that, by taking a few hours away from other work to write this, maybe this might help nudge aLBoP Phase 1 toward being a site where we can post more information, more Type Heroes, more character spotlights, and just more fun articles.  I’ve been wanting to do an article about Winston Churchill for years now, titled “How an ENFP Saved the World,” because he really did, and yes he was unequivocally an ENFP(ip), but how can I justify taking the time to write that, time I could be giving to other people, when so many readers here on Phase 1 won’t, well, read?  I worry that so many internet skimmers wouldn’t get past the title before firing off comments authoritatively declaring “He wasn’t ENFP!! He was [roll the dice and insert any number of different types here]!”  We owe Gwen and Phil 20 bucks, since someone did indeed leave a comment (one of the many that we decided to leave unapproved) assertively stating that, because Lord Shen has a grand vision, he is therefore INTJ.  Wow.  So that’s how we’re defining these complex variables of human thought and desire, now?  And so none of the other fifteen Cognitive approaches to life can have a grand vision?  Seriously?  Sorry Elon Musk, no ENFJ(ij) for you, you gotta be INTJ I guess.  The all-knowing internet decrees it thus.

We really hoped, and I still do hope, that by bringing the subject of Subtypes here to Phase 1, it would be a quick way to immediately show people “Hey look, see those two little letters in parentheses?  Then maybe, just perhaps, this is something a little bit different from what you’re already used to.”  We hoped that would help the Personalized Typing service more easily show people “Hey this isn’t just MBTI, see?  We’re giving you six letters, not just four.”  There are actually more than six letters, more than eight; it seems to be a magnificently reiterating fractal of complexity, with each new layer of sub-typing adding ever more clearly definable nuance to the intricacy of consciousness, but we figured that the basic idea of Subtypes was plenty enough for Phase 1 right now.  I worry that even by dangling that little hint of more information, it might lead people to leap to conclusions and simplifications.  Fair enough, but I also hope that this can encourage more of you to read a little more carefully, to ponder a little more than you already do, to consider, to question, to dig deep, to see outside your own point of view and become a voice for understanding instead of adding to the cacophonous chorus of cartoony, rigid simplifications.

TL;DR: aLBoP is not MBTI.  But more accurately, if you really want a “Too Long, Didn’t Read,” then why are you even here?  There are plenty of skimmable websites that will be more than happy to let you simplify people into shallow little subjective boxes.  This is not a blog, though it did start as one over on blogspot, but pretty quickly we realized how much aLBoP could help us find and help cool people, honest and thoughtful people, people who are willing to expend the labor of time and energy to earn what they learn.  That’s the sort of person we love to meet.  That’s the kind of person we love to learn from, exchange ideas with, and see how we can help them add to the world in their own way, in their own life.  That’s what we’re all about.

October Updates, including Glossary!

Happy Halloween everyone! ? Better late in the month than never, I have a couple treats for you!

The first of which I’m especially excited about and will be ongoing; it’s an aLBoP Glossary, aka aLBoPGloss!  So that when you want to read up on any specific tool or concept on aLBoP, you can go read its individualized page for a brief (ish, I mean c’mon, this is still aLBoP we’re talking about 😉 ) summary of it.  There will also be related links to other pages, so you can know where to go to learn more about that, or similar topics.

Continue reading

A Little Bit of Subtypes

Alright!  This is Justin again.  So we’re gonna try to keep this huge, ginormo, super in-depth topic really short here (edit: ha!), because this is just sort of a preview.  But we’re still pretty excited to get to talk about subtypes here on “Phase 1!”

See, the full post about subtypes is on aLBoP Phase 2, and even that post is just the intro to the topic.  Phase 2 goes into far more depth about, well, everything!  But as you might expect, it kinda requires and presumes that you’ve already gotten familiar with everything here on the starter site.

Which, right, before I go on…  If you haven’t checked out at least the basic information here on aLBoP, I’m afraid you really should go read that before diving into this.  Watch the intro video if you haven’t already, and then get your bearings with the Super Simple Series.  Remember, aLBoP is not MBTI, so it’s probably best to go back to the start so you can get a handle on everything.

Okay!  Got that covered?  At least a bit?  Cool, so like I was saying, we go into much more depth and detail about subtypes, what they are, why they are, and how they work, on the Phase 2 site.  However, we really really want to talk about subtypes on our upcoming Stranger Things post!  Also, it’s nice to be able to put people’s subtypes after their main cognitive types, partly because it immediately shows “Hey, look!  This is something different, so maybe drop your assumptions about typing at the door.”  And then, hopefully, maybe, if wishes were horses, we might get fewer people strolling in, glancing at a few pictures, and leaving a “nope that’s wrong” comment without, you know, reading stuff.  We can dream.

So on then with the subtypes crash course!  To start with, putting it simply, subtypes are kinda just what they sound like: a subset, a personal focus within each cognitive type.  Continue reading

What is Personality?? New Intro Video

Hi there!  After over a year of anticipation, we finally have a new intro video!  Huzzah!  If you’re new here, this should help you know what aLBoP is all about and what makes us different than other personality systems and sites.  And if you already know and love aLBoP, we hope you’ll share this video with your friends!

Hoping to do the entire Super Simple Series in this whiteboard format eventually, so subscribe to the aLBoP YouTube channel so you see when we post more!  Oh, and because I know there will be confusion (which makes sense as I am the stick figure maven), but while I (Calise) am doing the voiceover for this video, it’s Justin doing the drawing.

Much love, as always! <3

Calise and Justin

aLBoP a Scam? Drama, Scandal, Ooh Ahh!

Once upon a time, last winter, we moved A Little Bit of Personality to WordPress from Blogger. It was a long, tedious process with a lot of formatting (which on some posts I’m still not pleased with). The site was down for almost a month. All the urls changed, even though I went through and made redirects for as many as I could.  And all our Google+ comments got removed (which honestly was part of the point of moving platforms.  It was being an annoying system).

All this led to the complex set of algorithms which is Google Search to be very confused as to what was important on aLBoP.  When you Googled aLBoP or A Little Bit of Personality, suddenly it was trying to give search results of random image links and obscure posts, instead of things people really wanted to find, such as Type Specializations, the Super Simple Series or Type Heroes.

It also didn’t help that we were working on other aspects of aLBoP and life in general, so posting has been a slow game all year.  As I understand it, Google prioritizes frequent posting, as well as Google+ shares (nepotism ? lol), neither of which were in our favor anymore.

But this also meant that non-aLBoP links, especially from popular sites, suddenly came up much earlier in search results.  One in particular, with the most click-bait-y subject line ever, notably rose to the first page of search results right away: a forum thread with the subject line “A Little Bit of Personality Blog: Is it a scam or did I overreact?”

Well if the promise of a scam won’t get people to listen to you, I don’t know what will.  Talk about the most buzzwordy word possible lol. Continue reading

Give a Little Personality: A Gift Guide by Type

 

Give a Little Personality
A Gift Guide by Type

Merry Christmas everyone!  Or whatever you celebrate 😉  Better late than never and as requested, we have a handy little guide for giving gifts according to personality!

Rather than a specific list of individual items, we thought it would be of more value to share with you the principles of what motivates each type and the trends we’ve noticed about what each personality enjoys!  So then this will be useful all year round and not just two days before Christmas 😛

This is our first hybrid post (woo-hoo!) with both a video and written portion (mid-term flashback *shiver*).  Watch the video for our full in-depth versions of what we think each type would like and why (with the option to skip forward 😉 It’s a pretty long video), and check out the summaries and full-sized pics below for each type at-a-glance!

 

Continue reading

Q&A Quickie: Behavioral vs. Cognitive Psychology

Another very frequently asked question, today on Q&A Quickies we look at the difference between behaviors and cognition in psychology and examine the bird on my shirt.


We’re loving your questions and I’ve been hard at work on Group Dynamics: The Avengers!  (I have to say, the video is looking pretty sweeet :D)  Have a lovely weekend everyone!!

« Older posts