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Educate the World about Personality Types


 

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    Duckienz is in Europe!

    43 things personality test 11 months ago

    Hmmm today I got
    You are a Creative Self-Knowing Extrovert
    1% of the 6864 people who have taken this quiz are like you.

    Yesterday I did the quiz and got a different result… What did I do differently? Although the test DID have different questions, I am sure of it ;)
    I KNEW it was off yesterday, telling me I was organised LOL

    EDIT: seeeee
    I just did it again and now…
    You are a Self-Knowing Tree Hugging Extrovert

    1% of the 6868 people who have taken this quiz are like you.



    Duckienz is in Europe!

    Ok so people have been talking about the Miggs test thingy so I thought I would have a look 13 months ago

    I have been investigating a PPA style called DISC (more on that later) that has made me think more about personality types. Soooo I thought that I would do the Miggs Bryer? test.

    Your Type is
    ENFP
    Extraverted(67) Intuitive(12) Feeling(88) Perceiving(44)
    The numbers indicate Strength of the preferences as a %

    You are:
    distinctively expressed extravert
    slightly expressed intuitive personality
    very expressed feeling personality
    moderately expressed perceiving personality

    Idealist Portrait of the Champion (ENFP)
    Like the other Idealists, Champions are rather rare, say two or three percent of the population, but even more than the others they consider intense emotional experiences as being vital to a full life. Champions have a wide range and variety of emotions, and a great passion for novelty. They see life as an exciting drama, pregnant with possibilities for both good and evil, and they want to experience all the meaningful events and fascinating people in the world. The most outgoing of the Idealists, Champions often can’t wait to tell others of their extraordinary experiences. Champions can be tireless in talking with others, like fountains that bubble and splash, spilling over their own words to get it all out. And usually this is not simple storytelling; Champions often speak (or write) in the hope of revealing some truth about human experience, or of motivating others with their powerful convictions. Their strong drive to speak out on issues and events, along with their boundless enthusiasm and natural talent with language, makes them the most vivacious and inspiring of all the types.

    Fiercely individualistic, Champions strive toward a kind of personal authenticity, and this intention always to be themselves is usually quite attractive to others. At the same time, Champions have outstanding intuitive powers and can tell what is going on inside of others, reading hidden emotions and giving special significance to words or actions. In fact, Champions are constantly scanning the social environment, and no intriguing character or silent motive is likely to escape their attention. Far more than the other Idealists, Champions are keen and probing observers of the people around them, and are capable of intense concentration on another individual. Their attention is rarely passive or casual. On the contrary, Champions tend to be extra sensitive and alert, always ready for emergencies, always on the lookout for what’s possible.

    Champions are good with people and usually have a wide range of personal relationships. They are warm and full of energy with their friends. They are likable and at ease with colleagues, and handle their employees or students with great skill. They are good in public and on the telephone, and are so spontaneous and dramatic that others love to be in their company. Champions are positive, exuberant people, and often their confidence in the goodness of life and of human nature makes good things happen.

    People naturally confide in the Champion (ENFP). That’s why they make such good mediators, counselors, teachers, consultants, and reporters. Any position that outreaches to others can fit the Champion. They can be columnists, journalists, publicists, copy writers, advertising account executives. In the arts they can be character actors, cartoonists, art educators. If they choose jobs such as restaurateur, be sure that their business sites will be unique and designed for a particular type of customer. Don’t be surprised to see them as an inventor. This type of personality wants to experience the whole of life and may change careers more often than many other types. Says Charles, “I’ve had a number of jobs and when there is nothing left to create, I move to something new. I want my life to be spiced with newness, love, and joy.”

    Jung Career

    Journalist/Reporter
    Psychology
    Counseling
    Fitness & Nutrition
    Recreation Specialist
    Social Work
    Education
    Art
    Musician
    Acting and Performances
    Literature/Writer
    Film Producer
    Management
    Public Relations Specialist
    Marketing
    Fashion Merchandising
    Famous people of your particular type:
    Mark Twain, Bill Cosby, Oprah Winfrey, Betty Friedan

    Marina Margaret Heiss

    [The following comes partially from the archetype, but mostly from my own dealings with ENFPs.]

    General: ENFPs are both “idea”-people and “people”-people, who see everyone and everything as part of an often bizarre cosmic whole. They want to both help (at least, their own definition of “help”) and be liked and admired by other people, on bo th an individual and a humanitarian level. They are interested in new ideas on principle, but ultimately discard most of them for one reason or another.

    Social/Personal Relationships: ENFPs have a great deal of zany charm, which can ingratiate them to the more stodgy types in spite of their unconventionality. They are outgoing, fun, and genuinely like people. As SOs/mates they are warm, affectionate (l ots of PDA), and disconcertingly spontaneous. However, attention span in relationships can be short; ENFPs are easily intrigued and distracted by new friends and acquaintances, forgetting about the older ones for long stretches at a time. Less mature ENFPs may need to feel they are the center of attention all the time, to reassure them that everyone thinks they’re a wonderful and fascinating person.

    ENFPs often have strong, if unconvential, convictions on various issues related to their Cosmic View. They usually try to use their social skills and contacts to persuade people gently of the rightness of these views; his sometimes results in their negle cting their nearest and dearest while flitting around trying to save the world.
    Work Environment: ENFPs are pleasant, easygoing, and usually fun to work with. They come up with great ideas, and are a major asset in brainstorming sessions. Followthrough tends to be a problem, however; they tend to get bored quickly, especially if a newer, more interesting project comes along. They also tend to be procrastinators, both about meeting hard deadlines and about performing any small, uninteresting tasks that they’ve been assigned. ENFPs are at their most useful when working in a group w ith a J or two to take up the slack.

    ENFPs hate bureaucracy, both in principle and in practice; they will always make a point of launching one of their crusades against some aspect of it.


    Extraverted iNtuitive Feeling Perceiving
    by Joe Butt

    ENFPs are friendly folks. Most are really enjoyable people. Some of the most soft-hearted people are ENFPs.

    ENFPs have what some call a “silly switch.” They can be intellectual, serious, all business for a while, but whenever they get the chance, they flip that switch and become CAPTAIN WILDCHILD, the scourge of the swimming pool, ticklers par excellence. Som etimes they may even appear intoxicated when the “switch” is flipped.

    One study has shown that ENFPs are significantly overrepresented in psychodrama. Most have a natural propensity for role-playing and acting.

    ENFPs like to tell funny stories, especially about their friends. This penchant may be why many are attracted to journalism. I kid one of my ENFP friends that if I want the sixth fleet to know something, I’ll just tell him.

    ENFPs are global learners. Close enough is satisfactory to the ENFP, which may unnerve more precise thinking types, especially with such things as piano practice (“three quarter notes or four … what’s the difference?”) Amazingly, some ENFPs are adept at exacting disciplines such as mathematics.

    Friends are what life is about to ENFPs, moreso even than the other NFs. They hold up their end of the relationship, sometimes being victimized by less caring individuals. ENFPs are energized by being around people. Some have real difficulty being alone , especially on a regular basis.

    One ENFP colleague, a social worker, had such tremendous interpersonal skills that she put her interviewers at ease during her own job interview. She had the ability to make strangers feel like old friends.

    ENFPs sometimes can be blindsided by their secondary Feeling function. Hasty decisions based on deeply felt values may boil over with unpredictable results. More than one ENFP has abruptly quit a job in such a moment.

    Functional Analysis:

    Extraverted iNtuition
    The physical world, both geos and kosmos, is the ENFP’s primary source of information. Rather than sensing things as they are, dominant intuition is sensitive to things as they might be. These extraverted intuitives are most adept with patterns and connections. Their natural inclination is toward relationships, especially among people or living things.

    Intuition leans heavily on feeling for meaning and focus. Its best patterns reflect the interesting points of people, giving rise to caricatures of manner, speech and expression.

    Introverted Feeling
    Auxiliary feeling is nonverbally implied more often than it is openly expressed. When expressed, this logic has an aura of romance and purity that may seem out of place in this flawed, imperfect world. In its own defense, feeling judgement frequently and fleetly gives way to humor. ENFPs who publicize their feelings too often may put off some of the crowd of friends they naturally attract.

    Extraverted Thinking
    Thinking, the process which runs to impersonal conclusions, holds the extraverted tertiary position. Used on an occasional basis, ENFPs may benefit greatly from this ability. Less mature and lacking the polish of higher order functions, Thinking is not well suited to be used as a prominent function. As with other FP types, the ENFP unwary of Thinking’s limitations may find themselves most positively mistaken.

    Introverted Sensing
    Sensing, the least discernible ENFP function, resides in the inner world where reality is reduced to symbols and icons—ideas representing essences of external realities. Under the influence of the ever-present intuition, the ENFP’s sensory perceptions are in danger of being replaced by hypothetical data consistent with pattern and paradigm. When it is protected and nourished, introverted sensing provides information about the fixed. From such firm anchoring ENFPs are best equipped to launch into thousands of plausibilities and curiosities yet to be imagined.

    Perhaps the combination of introverted Feeling and childlike introverted Sensing is responsible for the silent pull of ENFPs to the wishes of parents, authority figures and friends. Or perhaps it’s the predominance of indecisive intuition in combination with the ambiguity of secondary Fi and tertiary Te that induces these kind souls to capitulate even life-affecting decisions. Whatever the dynamic, ENFPs are strongly influenced by the opinions of their friends.

    Famous ENFPs:
    Franz Joseph Haydn
    Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
    Will Rogers
    Buster Keaton
    Theodor “Dr.” Seuss Geisel (The Cat in the Hat)
    Mickey Rooney
    James Dobson (“Focus on the Family”)
    Andy Rooney
    Carol Burnett
    Paul Harvey
    Elizabeth Montgomery (Bewitched)
    Bill Cosby (Ghost Dad)
    Dom Delouise, actor
    Dave Thomas, owner of Wendy’s hamburger chain
    Lewis Grizzard, newspaper columnist
    I. King Jordan, president of Gallaudet University
    Martin Short, actor-comedian
    Meg Ryan, actor (When Harry Met Sally)
    Robin Williams, actor, comedian (Dead Poet’s Society, Mrs. Doubtfire)
    Sandra Bullock, actor (Speed, While You Were Sleeping)
    Robert Downey (Heart and Souls)
    Alicia Silverstone (Clueless)
    Sinbad
    Andy Kaufman
    Regis Philbin

    Fictional:
    Dr. Doug Ross (ER)
    Balkie (Perfect Strangers)
    Ariel (The Little Mermaid)
    The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
    Steve Irkle

    Copyright © 1996-2007 by Marina Margaret Heiss and Joe Butt

    Type Relationships for ENFPs:
    Identity Pal Complement Contrast
    Supplement Anima Suitemate Cohort
    Companion Tribesman Advisor Pedagogue
    Enigma Novelty Neighbor Counterpart
    Relationship Pairs: Definitions

    Advisor each has an area of insight that the other lacks
    Cohort mutually drawn into experiential escapades
    Companion similar modes of expression: bear each other’s company well
    Complement compatible strengths with opposite emphases
    Supplement like Pal, but functions are farther removed: each can add to the other’s strengths
    Tribesman share a sense of culture, but with different interests and abilities
    Anima fits Dr. Beebe’s description of the anima/anumus: each is the other’s inferior (4th) function
    Contrast point and counterpoint on each function
    Counterpart perform similar functions in totally different realms
    Enigma a puzzle: totally foreign in nearly every facet
    Identity same types: a typological mirror-image
    Neighbor arrive at the same place by variant processes
    Novelty intriguingly different: interestingly so
    Pal work and play well together: minimal natural type conflict
    Pedagogue each is both the other’s mentor and student: has a “parent to child” feel
    Suitemate a person one might be comfortable sharing an office. Prefer similar climates, but don’t necessarily have much in common as far as goals or world view



    myers-briggs for kids 17 months ago

    I read a book a couple of years ago, and since then have been really interested in personality types. To be able to talk to people that are just like me, is really comforting. (I always thought that I never quite fit in, but turns out most people who are INFP feel the same way!)

    So it turns out that I have to do a group assingment for my final Teaching Course, and as it happened one of my team members is fully into Myers-Briggs personalities, so we grabbed the opportunity. We are going to create a package which allows teachers to conduct a workshop with thier students, so that the students identify what personality they are, and how that affects relationships with their peers.
    I am really looking forward to doing more reseach on this, and hopefully I can implement it in my prac!



    Duckienz is in Europe!

    Personality Types 22 months ago

    There are so many people in this world who expect everybody to think and respond in the same way that they do. I was one of these people. I couldn’t understand why people would respond a certain way, it made NO sense to me.

    My parents thought I was some type of alien growing up. I could NEVER do anything the ‘right’ way. I was constantly trying to change to please them but even when I did things the way that they were doing it, it was still wrong. I was on an never ending struggle to learn how to live correctly.

    I was living with my (then) boyfriend and he told me to listen to a tape. It was a recording of a seminar by Florence Littauer. She was talking about the different personality types. During my time listening to this tape I started BAWLING my eyes out. She was talking about herself and the things she did and it sounded JUST LIKE ME. She went on to explain her personality type and why these things were strengths. For the first time I was being told that I was normal. I wept for days after hearing this tape and played it over and over and over. My ex then suggested I read her book ‘Personality Plus’. I haven’t got there yet but it is on my list and as soon as I see it I will get it and read it.

    Learning about the Four Personality Types and the different ways that people view the world REALLY changed my life. I now have more tolerance for people’s actions. I no longer stress when people ‘see’ me in a certain way. I know that I am ok finally. This REALLY helped me in loving myself. It is hard to love what you have been told is faulty for years.

    My advice to everyone is look at this information.

    A good website to start with is:
    http://www.oneishy.com/

    It will help you see what combination of Sanguine, Melancholy, Choleric and Phlegmatic you are. This allows you to view yourself completely differently.

    Also known as Powerful Choleric, Popular Sanguine, Peaceful Phlegmatic, Perfect Melancholy.

    Go on, have a look :)




     

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