Enneagram: The Scientific Guide to Self-Discovery and Personality Types, The Road to Increase Spirituality and Empath. Build Healthy Relationships and Stop Overthinking. Go back to Being Yourself
By Robert Leary
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About this ebook
If you always wanted to learn how to find an identity that fits you and you want to get back in touch with your roots and your deepest desires, then Keep Reading...
The truth is... Many of us grow up believing that there are two primary categories of people in the world: the good ones and the bad ones. But what if I told you there are nine primary perspectives in the world, all of which can look at the same item and see nine different things?
The Enneagram is more than just a personality test-it's a powerful tool for personal growth, spiritual transformation, and emotional balance. It allows us to look at ourselves through the eyes of others, and it allows us to see others without the veil of personal judgment. Furthermore, it's a method by which we can increase our capacity for empathy and compassion, creating a better world for ourselves and those around us. And that's what you'll learn in This Book.
Here's just a tiny fraction of what you will find in this book:
-What Enneagram is and how to effectively read it
-The Best Way to Deal With the Nine Personality Types
-How to Quickly Interpret Wing Types and Instinctual Variants
-Powerful Methods to Communicate With Any One of the Enneagram's Nine Archetypes
-Tips to Ascend the Growth Scale and Work on Personal Development
-How to Stop Overthinking, Overworking and Overreacting Now
-Why Is it so Important To Live a More Authentic, Balanced and Fullfilling Life
-...and much, much more!
The Enneagram is a personality assessment theory that describes these nine perspectives in great detail, tracing nine different types of behavioral patterns back to nine different developmental roots. Even if you have no experience with spirituality and consider yourself a skeptic you'll be able to understand the Enneagram, because it's based in real scientific studies done over time in humans as they've changed through the ages. Furthermore you'll increase your self-awareness and discover your core identity.
Would you like to know more ?
Grab your copy today to learn all about the Enneagram!
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Enneagram - Robert Leary
Introduction
Congratulations on purchasing this book on the Enneagram of personality and thank you for doing so. Within the following chapters, you’ll be guided through the first few steps of a potentially life-changing journey of personal development, empathetic enlightenment, and spiritual growth. I’m excited to share this journey with you, and I have no doubt that once you get started, you’ll be glad you chose this path, too.
I haven’t always been interested in personality typing systems. Like most adolescents, I grew up thinking that my personality—my thoughts, feelings, behaviors, preferences, and perspectives—were essentially normal, average, and reasonable; that any person put in my position, given access to the same information, influenced by the same authority figures, exposed to the same experiences, would likely make the same choices that I did. Whenever I would encounter someone whose viewpoint didn’t make sense to me, or whenever I would find myself in a conflict that I didn’t fully understand, I would resign to writing off the other person (or people) involved as crazy, moody, or misinformed. I believed that I was good at communicating, and that if anyone else had trouble understanding my actions, that was their problem. And though I probably never would have admitted it back then, over time, I was developing a nagging internal fear that I might be wrong; that I might be the moody, crazy, misinformed one; that my perspective included a fair number of blind spots; that maybe--just maybe—the problem wasn’t that everyone else was insane. Maybe the problem was that, from where I was standing, I couldn’t see the reasons behind their actions. Maybe other people couldn’t see my reasons, either, and that was why they couldn’t understand me, my behaviors, my choices, or my beliefs.
When I finally found the Enneagram, it felt like taking off sunglasses that I hadn’t realized I’d been wearing my entire life. I was like Dorothy in the first full-color scene in The Wizard of Oz, amazed at all the diversity and depth I’d been missing out on beforehand. Through learning about this personality typing system, I was able to put many of my past experiences into context, understand nuances I’d previously been blinded to, and empathize with people who had once mystified, or even infuriated, me. More importantly, I was led to discover some interesting truths about myself, ones that I might never have come to terms with otherwise.
Like any personality typing system, the Enneagram is not a scientific method; it is subjective, and impossible to measure with any standard of precision or accuracy. That being said, the Enneagram can still be extraordinarily powerful when used as a creative tool, rather than a yardstick. It can help to improve communication between friends, family members, and romantic partners; it can build stronger, more harmonious team dynamics in work environments; and it can help to steer any individual towards personal growth and fulfillment. It provides a vocabulary through which we can discuss difficult subjects and free ourselves from the rhetoric of blame and malicious intent. Finally, it consistently works to remind us that our personality types are dynamic, not fixed, so each and every one of us has the capacity to learn, grow, change, and evolve. We all have it in us to become heroes, villains, or apathetic bystanders. What defines us, in the end, are the choices we make, and the reasons we make them.
I have every hope that this book will spark your curiosity, entertain and enlighten you, and inspire you to share its contents with the most important people in your life. There are lots of books about the Enneagram on the market today, so thank you again for choosing this one. Every effort was made to ensure it is full of as much useful and accurate information as possible. Please enjoy!
Chapter 1: What is the Enneagram?
The Enneagram is a personality assessment tool that is popularly used to promote self-discovery, encourage empathy, and foster personal growth. It references nine primary archetypes, or personality categories, each associated with a numerical value. These numerical values are charted on various points of the Enneagram’s physical representation as a geometric shape (see figure below). The relationships between these symbolic numbers correlate to the interpersonal behaviors exhibited and experienced by the represented types.
These archetypes aren’t quite like those you might find in fictional settings. None are particularly benevolent or nefarious; they are neither inherently masculine nor feminine. These archetypes don’t adhere to cultural, religious, or familial roles, and the varied types show up in every imaginable walk of life, amongst the wealthy and impoverished, the uneducated and the academically distinguished, the young and the old. Each Enneagram personality archetype, or enneatype as we’ll refer to them henceforth, is a description of an individual’s primary motivating force, or inner emotional drive, rather than a characterization of their outward appearance or their role in any social group.
The Enneagram does not evaluate you based on the way that others perceive you, or the ways in which you interact with them; it is primarily based upon self-reported evidence, which is why it cannot claim to be a technical or scientific method. That being said, the fact that enneatype testing and Enneagram growth work are so heavily focused on self-awareness, rather than externally imposed measurement and analyses, is exactly what makes this method so effective for many people. It may take longer to identify our own types than it would for others to judge and convey their impressions to us in the name of guidance; but the journey to find oneself can be healing and rewarding, as well as character-building. Furthermore, when we are able to see ourselves in more than just one of the archetype descriptions, we subconsciously work to enhance our empathetic capacities by considering the world from varying vantage points.
It may help to think of the enneatypes not as different personalities, but rather, as different forms of modus operandi. They do not accurately predict what colors, flavors, or textures we’ll enjoy most, or what genres of music and literature will spark our interests; they don’t always determine the degrees of introversion or extroversion that we display; they cannot always explain the types of careers, lifestyles, and lovers that we choose. Instead, the enneatypes describe road maps, blue prints, or operating systems. They plot out the varied ways in which people interact with the world based on differing perspectives. The Enneagram focuses on the motivations behind actions, and furthermore, how these motivations are often defined early in life by experiences that teach us what our role in life should be, or how best to survive in the face of risk and uncertainty.
Where does the Enneagram come from?
The origins of the Enneagram theory are shrouded in mystery. There is some evidence to suggest that it originated in Alexandria, in the 4th century BC, evolving from the theories of Christian mystic Evagrius Ponticus (also known as Evagrius the Solitary
) which spoke of eight deadly thoughts, or logismoi,
their eight remedies, called holy thoughts,
and one overarching supreme thought to rule over all others: the notion of self-love. This origin story cannot be proven, however, and there are many who believe the concepts of the Enneagram archetypes have earlier roots in the era of ancient mythology.
The term is derived from Greek roots: ennea,
meaning nine,
and gramma,
meaning written or drawn.
This name refers both to the geometric figure and the personality assessment theory applied to it. It’s difficult to say with any certainty when, where, or how the personality theory was first devised, but we do have plenty of information about its modern development.
Most present-day teachings of the Enneagram are inspired by the works of Oscar Ichazo and Claudia Naranjo. Ichazo is a Bolivian-born philosopher who is largely credited with the development of modern personality types; he founded the Arica Institute in Chile, where Naranjo eventually became one of his students. Chilean-born Naranjo, a psychiatrist, was eventually disowned by Ichazo and the Arica Institute, as he went on to divert from Ichazo’s school of thought and teach his own theory of the Enneagram in the United States in the early 1970s. Both men, and both theories, still garner a great deal of respect in the personal development community; however, their differences have led to a number of points of confusion and contention amongst followers, as there is often a lack of consistency between different schools, coaches, and written resources.
While you may encounter slight differences in terminology from one Enneagram coach to the next—some refer to the type four personality as the Romantic while others will call it the Individualist type—it’s important to note that the numerical