Jesse Aarons MBTI Personality Type

Personality

What personality type is Jesse Aarons? Jesse Aarons is an ISFP personality type in MBTI, 6w5 - sp/sx - 694 in Enneagram, RLUAN in Big 5, SEI in Socionics.

There are several expectations that people around Jess have for him. His family wants him to be an obedient son and brother, often prioritizing his ability to perform tasks over his own personality. His father, in particular, expects him to be a "young man" and view the world from an adult and masculine perspective. If his personal passions and skills, such as art, don't assist him in fitting into this role, they are discouraged. He holds a very insecure and pessimistic view of himself, which drives him to exert great efforts to prove his capabilities. Claudio Naranjo, in a workshop he gave in Madrid in 1994 about the type Four conservation, said the following: "He is the one who makes the most effort to deserve affection. He doesn't blame the other person, nor does he blame himself through emotional reproach, but through concrete efforts to do things better. In this sense, he is more like Enneatype One. He is a very active Enneatype." The fact that envy, which is the dominant passion of Enneatype Four, is not as present in the Four conservation is partly due to their efforts to do things well. This effort masks or compensates for their envy of others, as in their internal representation, when they strive to accomplish or do things well, they don't compare themselves as much with others. The underlying belief is that if no effort is made, gratification is not deserved. He wants to survive; he endures everything; despite his outward inexpressiveness, he is stoic and preserves his own feelings and emotional nature. On the other hand, SP9 is the opposite of this; they reject this emotional depth and effort towards others. "The conservation Enneatype 9 has difficulty in connecting with their emotions and especially with pain. They do whatever it takes not to come into contact with themselves or with others. There is something deep down that they prefer not to look at; they cover it with food or tobacco." SP9 simply cannot tolerate, in the long term, the intensity of emotions. Feeling too much is dangerous. There is a fear of losing control, a fear of something they don't know about themselves that produces anxiety. They fear what they might discover and reveal if they follow the intensity and go deeper.

Biography

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