Anonymous wrote:Dear Wife of OP, who I dearly hope finds this thread:
Girl, I hope you get all the face cream money you can out of this douchenozzle in the divorce settlement. Also, and importantly: Which cream? Where did you get it? Do you want to meet up for a Sephora session and some cocktails sometime?
Anonymous wrote:OK, I just reread that and it was incredibly poorly written. Again, I was voice dictating that. The main argument is that my wife accuses me of never taking her side or overly disagreeing when she presents a point. My contention is that I don’t wanna walk on eggshells and if I don’t fuel at the point she’s making is valid I should be able to make a counterpoint or the opposite argument and hopefully we can remain friends. Anyway, she threaten divorce today when I said maybe it was because she got a lot of sleep last night rather than this face cream being the reason her skin looked so glowing today. My personal belief is that water, sleep, low stress is more effective than a face cream, but what do I know? I mean people are obsessed with Korean beauty products apparently. I am just skeptical than any of these face creams actually do all that much. I believe Botox would definitely work, but there are so many companies hocking so many products which is probably have little to no effect. Again, I am a man and I don’t use beauty products so I have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you should take the Myers-Briggs test, ASAP.
You sound like a classic INTJ - https://www.16personalities.com/intj-personality
"Architects aren’t known for being warm and fuzzy. They tend to prioritize rationality and success over politeness and pleasantries – in other words, they’d rather be right than popular....Because Architects value truth and depth, many common social practices – from small talk to white lies – may seem pointless or downright stupid to them. As a result, they may inadvertently come across as rude or even offensive when they’re only trying to be honest. At times, Architects may wonder if dealing with other people is even worth the frustration."
Yeah, no. My husband is an INTJ (and an actual architect) and he is very analytical and does often come of, unintentionally, as aloof or cold. But he is very loving (not effusive about it, but I've known him long enough to know what is effusive for him) and does not pick random fights with me over stuff that only I care about just to be right. If I told him I loved my new expensive face cream, he'd just smile and say he was happy for me and then go back to his crossword puzzle, because he doesn't care about my face cream at all but he is smart enough to know that's really not the point.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you should take the Myers-Briggs test, ASAP.
You sound like a classic INTJ - https://www.16personalities.com/intj-personality
"Architects aren’t known for being warm and fuzzy. They tend to prioritize rationality and success over politeness and pleasantries – in other words, they’d rather be right than popular....Because Architects value truth and depth, many common social practices – from small talk to white lies – may seem pointless or downright stupid to them. As a result, they may inadvertently come across as rude or even offensive when they’re only trying to be honest. At times, Architects may wonder if dealing with other people is even worth the frustration."
Anonymous wrote:OP, you should take the Myers-Briggs test, ASAP.
You sound like a classic INTJ - https://www.16personalities.com/intj-personality
"Architects aren’t known for being warm and fuzzy. They tend to prioritize rationality and success over politeness and pleasantries – in other words, they’d rather be right than popular....Because Architects value truth and depth, many common social practices – from small talk to white lies – may seem pointless or downright stupid to them. As a result, they may inadvertently come across as rude or even offensive when they’re only trying to be honest. At times, Architects may wonder if dealing with other people is even worth the frustration."