I would like to give a more complete response to this as applied to my own life. I apologize for getting defensive. Interestingly I think this relates to my story. Around the time of grade school, I started developing a counterbalancing personality to my original personality. The original being the INTP "theorizer", and the ISTP being the "practicer". The ISTP very rarely comes out online and here on the forum sense it is more of the "shut up and do" kinda personality. Think athletes that never really talk about or can even articulate well what there strategy is.
In a society were everyone around me is wasteful, the ISTP sees an opportunity to capture these inefficiencies. The ISTP is very good at organizing, cleaning, cooking, hosting, and generally "event setup and hosting". These skills being developed over several years of working the kinds of jobs people tend to look down upon. For my ISTP personality, these jobs are simply meditation. Even now when I cook and host an event for up to 100 people (with some help), I feel relaxed in the intensive heat of the moment. I feel quite confident that this mastery of my stress is applicable to just about any situation. This shows with the learning of new physical skills like playing sports. My ISTP brain also likes to dabble in woodworking and a variety of other areas but tends to jump around too much for deep expertise in such areas. For now anyway.
Generally, my INTP side and my ISTP side are slowly balancing out over time. Clearly, I will never be at the same level of "doing" or S as someone who was born with a "sensor" personality. That is okay because none of us need to do everything, but my worth in group settings speaks for itself in that many people say they like to be around me and hire me for gigs ranging from tutoring to house-sitting to computer repair.
I have been inspired by your journal and others here for a long time now. That is partially why I joined the community, so that I could learn from people different than me, people like you.