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Dua Lipa MBTI Personality Type

Personality

What personality type is Dua Lipa? Dua Lipa is an ISFP personality type in MBTI, 6w7 - sx/so - 694 in Enneagram, SCOAI in Big 5, SEI in Socionics.

When looking into Dua Lipa, for a while, I thought that she may be an Fe user due to the focus on unity she often takes, but I realized that the focus itself is likely from an Se perspective, with ISFP being more likely due to sheer amount of examples I could find of her Fi preference, as well as her peaceful and quiet demeanor that can be seen in her interviews. Similar to Fe, Fi is a function that puts values above all, but unique to Fi is its focus on individuality, authenticity to ones own belief system, and often subdued expression of emotion, all things that are notable in her interviews. Here's a few quotes that back up the idea of her leading with Fi: ¶ “I haven’t been told not to say stuff about things I feel passionate about. If somebody told me not to discuss issues I’m passionate about, I wouldn’t listen. I’ve always been this way and I feel like nothing can really change who I am as a person.” ¶ "I've always been very much in control of my music and my image, and I think one of the things I've been lucky about is I didn't bring a label on board until I really figured out who I was." ¶ “To earn money for music sessions, I worked in restaurants and nightclubs, eventually scoring a record contract at the age of 18. My debut album experience also helped me define who I wanted to be as an artist. I feel like I’m very much more in touch with who I am now. I have a very clear idea of what I’m doing and what I want to say. Things I’m not afraid of.” ¶ “I got that because I always wear my heart on my sleeve and I’m not going to change that. I’m never going to change myself, but it’s in barbed wire because I should protect my heart no matter what." ¶ “I was constantly being like, ‘This is me and I’m not manufactured,’ but it takes a lot of growth and time and effort and all of that until you get to a point where people say, ‘Okay, I believe you.’” ¶ “As a female artist, I guess your first music videos of you with a guitar and you with a piano; you know people instantly think that you are manufactured, or you are not exactly an artist and you don’t write your own lyrics. Whereas, if you are a male, people instantly think that you write your own music and people instantly have that perception of you that you are exactly what it says on the tin - you know, and not necessarily is that true. And I think more often than not, us as women, we have to really prove ourselves that we do what we do, and what we do, we do it really well. But I guess you just have to go through life and hope that it changes at some point.” ¶ “I think the artists are really the face of the music they make. It’s no longer the genre that dictates it.“ ¶ “It upsets me that probably some of the younger generations of refugees don’t really have the same opportunities that I was given because of the fortunate – or unfortunate – fact that my parents moved to London and I was born here and able to live my dream and do something on a global scale.” ¶ "I still take a lot of pride in being able to write my own songs. My story's coming from me." ¶ “I wanted to write songs that were more sad, more about heartbreak, because I thought that writing happy songs would turn into cheesy songs. I had to fight that because I was like, ‘I am happy. I deserve to be happy.’ I should be able to write about that without the fear of feeling like I’m compromising my authenticity because I’m not crying about something or someone.” ¶ “I just feel like, if you’re a feminist, you have to also support women in all fields of work. We have to support sex workers, we have to believe that that [work] is their choice and their right. It seems quite hypocritical, I think, people picking and choosing as to how they want to support women and when it suits them. That’s another form of misogyny, which really derives from the male gaze.” ¶ "Everything that I do is very autobiographical. I’m trying to be as much of an open book as possible and give the audience every single piece of me." ¶ “I never really wanted to base success on charts and chart positioning. For me, it’s really about the shows and seeing them grow.” ¶ “People just telling me that I wasn’t good enough or that I wasn’t deserving of it or whatever it was…. I was like, ‘All right, I’m just going to shut everything out. And I’m going to make sure that I get this album the way that I want it to. And I’m really just going to focus on being great at everything that I do.’” ¶ “You wanna make sure what you say is good and that you spread kindness and empathize with people’s different situations.” [1/2]

Biography

Dua Lipa (born 22 August 1995) is an English singer and songwriter. After working as a model, she signed with Warner Music Group in 2015 and released her eponymous debut album in 2017. The album peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart, and yielded nine singles, including "Be the One" and "IDGAF", and the UK number-one single "New Rules", which also peaked at number six in the US. In 2018, Lipa won the Brit Awards for British Female Solo Artist and British Breakthrough Act.

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