From fc1dfff38e13c08df9acea54410ea265628e6050 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Spencer Grimes Date: Sat, 10 Jan 2026 13:38:21 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] "vault backup: 2026-01-10 13:38:21 from Flow" --- 20-Knowledge/Briggs/Smithys Overview.md | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) diff --git a/20-Knowledge/Briggs/Smithys Overview.md b/20-Knowledge/Briggs/Smithys Overview.md index 0dd0a26..b89a536 100644 --- a/20-Knowledge/Briggs/Smithys Overview.md +++ b/20-Knowledge/Briggs/Smithys Overview.md @@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ Take my deer picture from yesterday (see below). You said something like 'that's An easy example of these is a J and a P go out to eat together. The J has a pretty good idea of what they want before they even get there, whereas the P arrives at the table, opens the menu, and begins browsing with nary a clue yet. They want to decide in the moment and they have no concept of being on time or making people wait. Harrison likes being 15 minutes late to get togethers. Despite sounding like a P thing, this is a J thing. Perceivers are often late because they're so in the moment, and without lots of training (typically from a J parent or two, or the Truth) they don't track time as readily. Harrison is a J who specifically likes being 15 minutes late so things are established and it isn't a whole cutscene when he walks in. I had a perceiver friend when I was growing up. He called me one day and was on his way to hang out with me, but literally never showed up. Turns out he kept getting occupied with things the entire day. I sat around waiting all day and he never showed. That's an extreme example, but there it is. + *Oh, he must know Marcus* For example, once you start getting more familiar with these letters and what they represent, then you can start noticing how they work together. A fun thing to start learning is the various two letter combos. NF's, SP's, SJ's.