4/02/2015

Enneagram Type 6w5 - The Loyalist

话说,某天朋友 whatapps 了一个 link 给我 

http://www.eclecticenergies.com/enneagram/test.php

用了漫长的时间,做了测试,显示结果是 type 6w5,细读分析后,逐渐回想起一些事情,难怪了。。。。。

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6
THE LOYALIST
Enneagram Type Six

Enneagram Six

The Committed, Security-Oriented Type:
Engaging, Responsible, Anxious, and Suspicious


Type Six in Brief

The committed, security-oriented type. Sixes are reliable, hard-working, responsible, and trustworthy. Excellent "troubleshooters," they foresee problems and foster cooperation, but can also become defensive, evasive, and anxious—running on stress while complaining about it. They can be cautious and indecisive, but also reactive, defiant and rebellious. They typically have problems with self-doubt and suspicion. At their Best: internally stable and self-reliant, courageously championing themselves and others.
  • Basic Fear: Of being without support and guidance
  • Basic Desire: To have security and support
  • Enneagram Six with a Five-Wing: "The Defender"
  • Enneagram Six with a Seven-Wing: "The Buddy"
Key Motivations: Want to have security, to feel supported by others, to have certitude and reassurance, to test the attitudes of others toward them, to fight against anxiety and insecurity.

Type Six Overview

We have named personality type Six The Loyalist because, of all the personality types, Sixes are the most loyal to their friends and to their beliefs. They will “go down with the ship” and hang on to relationships of all kinds far longer than most other types. Sixes are also loyal to ideas, systems, and beliefs—even to the belief that all ideas or authorities should be questioned or defied. Indeed, not all Sixes go along with the “status quo”: their beliefs may be rebellious and anti-authoritarian, even revolutionary. In any case, they will typically fight for their beliefs more fiercely than they will fight for themselves, and they will defend their community or family more tenaciously than they will defend themselves.
The reason Sixes are so loyal to others is that they do not want to be abandoned and left without support—their Basic Fear. Thus, the central issue for type Six is a failure of self-confidence. Sixes come to believe that they do not possess the internal resources to handle life’s challenges and vagaries alone, and so increasingly rely on structures, allies, beliefs, and supports outside themselves for guidance to survive. If suitable structures do not exist, they will help create and maintain them.
Sixes are the primary type in the Thinking Center, meaning that they have the most trouble contacting their own inner guidance. As a result,
they do not have confidence in their own minds and judgments.
This does not mean that they do not think. On the contrary, they think—and worry—a lot! They also tend to fear making important decisions, although at the same time, they resist having anyone else make decisions for them. They want to avoid being controlled, but are also afraid of taking responsibility in a way that might put them “in the line of fire.” (The old Japanese adage that says, “The blade of grass that grows too high gets chopped off” relates to this idea.)
Sixes are always aware of their anxieties and are always looking for ways to construct “social security” bulwarks against them. If Sixes feel that they have sufficient back up, they can move forward with some degree of confidence. But if that crumbles, they become anxious and self-doubting, reawakening their Basic Fear. (“I’m on my own! What am I going to do now?”) A good question for Sixes might therefore be: “When will I know that I have enough security?” Or, to get right to the heart of it, “What is security?” Without Essential inner guidance and the deep sense of support that it brings, Sixes are constantly struggling to find firm ground.
Sixes attempt to build a network of trust over a background of unsteadiness and fear. They are often filled with a nameless anxiety and then try to find or create reasons why. Wanting to feel that there is something solid and clear-cut in their lives, they can become attached to explanations or positions that seem to explain their situation. Because “belief” (trust, faith, convictions, positions) is difficult for Sixes to achieve, and because it is so important to their sense of stability, once they establish a trustworthy belief, they do not easily question it, nor do they want others to do so. The same is true for individuals in a Six’s life: once Sixes feel they can trust someone, they go to great lengths to maintain connections with the person who acts as a sounding board, a mentor, or a regulator for the Six’s emotional reactions and behavior. They therefore do everything in their power to keep their affiliations going. (“If I don’t trust myself, then I have to find something in this world I can trust.”)
Although intelligent and accomplished, Connie still has to wrestle with the self-doubt of her type:
“As my anxiety has come under control, so has my need to ‘check out’ everything with my friends. I used to have to get the nod of approval from several hundred (just joking!) ‘authorities.’ About nearly every decision would involve a council of my friends. I usually would do this one on one: ‘What do you think, Mary?’ ‘If I do this, then that might happen.’ Please make up my mind for me!’…Recently, I’ve narrowed my authorities to just one or two trusted friends, and on occasion, I’ve actually made up my own mind!“
Until they can get in touch with their own inner guidance, Sixes are like a ping-pong ball that is constantly shuttling back and forth between whatever influence is hitting the hardest in any given moment. Because of this reactivity, no matter what we say about Sixes, the opposite is often also as true. They are both strong and weak, fearful and courageous, trusting and distrusting, defenders and provokers, sweet and sour, aggressive and passive, bullies and weaklings, on the defensive and on the offensive, thinkers and doers, group people and soloists, believers and doubters, cooperative and obstructionistic, tender and mean, generous and petty—and on and on. It is the contradictory picture that is the characteristic “fingerprint” of Sixes, the fact that they are a bundle of opposites.
The biggest problem for Sixes is that they try to build safety in the environment without resolving their own emotional insecurities. When they learn to face their anxieties, however, Sixes understand that although the world is always changing and is, by nature uncertain, they can be serene and courageous in any circumstance. And they can attain the greatest gift of all, a sense of peace with themselves despite the uncertainties of life.
(from The Wisdom of the Enneagram, p. 235-236)

Quoted from: http://www.enneagraminstitute.com/TypeSix.asp#.VRwUEvmUfwY 


2/19/2015

2015 新年新愿望

好了又新一年了,辗转几年就这样过去了,还没来得及回味 2014,现在就过着 2015 的农历新年了,和时间赛跑啊,时间都哪去啦?

2015 新年新愿望:活得自在。所谓的“自在”:工作自在,友情自在,爱情自在,财务自在,生活自在。

2015, 也和时间拼了,加油!

4/21/2014

相遇與離別

「相遇與離別總在匆匆的旅途上
總在來不及反應之前
就得揮揮手  說再見
轉身  後離開」- 2012, Wellington, NZ


10/29/2013

沉醉


就像很投入地看了一场电影
我又不知不觉地坠入你的世界里

沉醉着,陶醉着,幻想着

那猜疑的假象 

那不存在的实情

突然,
一个巴掌过来,把我给打醒
我又回来属于我的世界
 
差点就忘了我是谁  
忘了我在哪里   
忘了我自

3/16/2013

在回忆里死去

回头望去,他嘴角扬起,
一幅画面,有他有她,
幸福快乐。

落魄身影,背对着你,
一幅画面,有我有我
独自离去。

他没回头,你没抬头,
他们在生活中重生,
我们在回忆里死去。

1/30/2013

存在的空間


伴隨音樂迴盪
空間縱橫交錯
一曲一幕  一字一句
太遙遠  太漂浮
看不見  也抓不著

11/08/2012

北岛Wellington - 我的那些年



清晨7时,北岛Wellington巴士站前,又要转换下一站了。

一如往常,前后背着大小背包,手拎食物袋,朦胧胧的坐在巴士站,等待下一班车。

一位60-70岁左右的老婆婆走来,微笑坐在我身旁。我顺口问问老婆婆前去下一站的巴士,我们于是展开了话题,聊了一阵,老婆婆若有所思的望着我说:“想当年,我在你这个年纪时,也曾一个人背包旅行,那年我还从伦敦走到加德满都呢!你更绝对不会相信,直到今天当我翻阅相本,我依然记得旅途中那些人的名字!我甚至只见过他们一次!”

巴士正好开来,老婆婆正说到兴起,我还来不及给她任何反应,我们一同上了巴士,一路上,老婆婆若有所思,更missed 了下站,哈!相必 ,我让她回想起她的那些年吧!
又,会不会有一天,有哪个女孩会让数十年后的我回想起,我的那些年呢?