Why Personality Tests are Essential
Thursday, September 15, 2011

In writing about Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), there is one thing I want to convey from the get go. And that's why I believe MBTI is valid & important.
My NFness (yes, coined the term) provides me with a keen need to understand myself & others. By knowing people's personality, it allows me from not putting them in a box. Rather, to understand them & their story, in order to meet them where they are at. Not only to meet them, but to encourage them to become who they were designed to be. It's absolutely critical in my mind to know one's self & others, in order to give & receive grace. It's also critical in knowing personalities to best teach & give direction (ENFJs are best known for this as the Teacher).
In knowing yourself better & those around you, you will be able to improve communication, connection, & community. I see this benefiting me in parenting as I seek to understand how to relate with my children; as well as, how to direct, discipline & guide them. I'm recognizing that there is not a one size fits all. Plus, it makes the handiwork of God even more inspiring & imaginative to me.
In the next post I will briefly discuss the letters of Myers-Briggs. Until then, do you agree that personality tests are important? Why or why not? How have you found them useful or a hindrance?





Reader Comments (5)
..just my two cents. Looking forward to the rest of this series!
Thank you for sharing. I completely see your point in the abuse of personality findings. One thing I have found is that we all have issues & we have a choice on whether, we as people (not NFs, SJs, NTs, SPs) want to seek healing & change. It's being able to see an immature ESFJ to a mature ESFJ...they will look different. I know for myself I looked different in my early 20s to now in my early 30s. I was lead more based off of my F & it dictated a lot more than it should have. Going through counseling & healing & doing the hard work of dealing with my "stuff" allowed me more freedom in being an ENFJ. Not giving excuse or simply saying, "Well, this is who I am." Plain & simple is we are all to love people regardless of personality type. That's how I feel about it:) Thank you for taking the time to write your experiences & story.
And my "type" comes down to this: if you "believe in" cognitive functions (yes, I'm a closet-geek too; mostly b/c I worked so hard to figure out the INFJ/P question) I can't be anything but INFJ.
If you don't believe in CFs (my INTP friend pointed out CFs haven't been vigorously studied/verified the way the types themselves have; their own momentum/in-teaching has perpetuated their status/place in personality theory), I have to be INFP.
Since CFs have made such a difference in my understanding of myself (again, because of the power of naming and having vocabulary for preciously inexpressible elements and distinctions) I usually sit with the first camp. Usually.
Peace to you.