| | INTJ club members, what follows are my efforts to make some kind of an impression:
I reliably come up as INTJ as well, but I can no longer trust my scores regarding this (I believe that I can read "between the lines" on these tests). Now that I've learned too much about how and where various answers to various questions would sort someone, the test only reliably tells me about my "self-concept" (I see myself as such; so these tests have become crude tools that can only tell me that much).
Perhaps I'm sliding into megalomania here? Nah, if I were sliding toward megalomania, then I WOULD DEFINITELY be aware of that as well - in fact, there seems to be nothing that can escape my all-encompassing awareness! Quite frankly, my mind is like Big Brother; all-seeing, all-knowing, all-powerful. It's scary sometimes ... being me.
p.s. After being court-ordered to enter the 12-step program entitled Megalomaniacs Anonymous, I quickly learned that I was the only one there who didn't have a problem (I had originally figured that I'd make it out in 6 steps or less, but that was being pessimistic!).
You see, I don't have a problem with megalomania (and if I did, well then, I'd definitely be the first to know about it). And I can quit being overbearingly haughty, conceited, and arrogant ANY TIME I WANT TO, being such a master of thought and emotion. I just don't FEEL like it right now, that's all (which is exactly what I tried to tell that half-witted, high-browed, herd of heathens).
Needless to say, I took my 12 steps toward the door and left. I can just see those seething megalomaniacs now, cursing over my being late, cursing over my disruptive exit from their precious little group - as if the world revolved around them; go figure! In fact, I'm willing to bet that I know what they're thinking better than THEY DO! Hell, I could've led that group better than the leader did! And the sad thing is that I'd do it if they weren't such megalomaniacal freaks!
Ed
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