The High Priestess - II MBTI Personality Type
Personality
What personality type is The High Priestess - II? The High Priestess - II is an INFJ personality type in MBTI, 5w4 - sx/sp - 954 in Enneagram, RCOAI in Big 5, IEI in Socionics.
The High Priestess represents the deeper, more subtile aspect of the female archetype - the darkness, the mystery, psychic power, the might of the moon to enlighten the subconscious. The High Priestess is silcence, passivity, containing a power of her own. Only when retiring from the world, can we allow our subconscious to rise, listen to our inner voice and recognize our spiritual power. Most people never rest like this, as our society supports the total surpression of the subconscious, but without it we will never understand ourselves. The High Priestess is inner wisdom at its deepest, a wisdom that cannot be expressed in rational terms. Trying so, we would already falsify and restrict it As a symbol for deeper knowledge, the card can express a feeling of darkness, which might also be a feeling of fear, but also a feeling of beauty. We know there is more inside than we can see. In a negative aspect, the High Priestess could stand for passivity at the wrong time, leading to weakness and a fear of life. It could mean that a person is very sensitive but unable to touch their feelings or just live with their feelings. Drive: The desire to find the inner sources, the own springs Light: Being one with the beginning of all, aware of the wisdom from the subconscious, intuitive knowledge, patience Shadow: Dreaming, changing moods, doubts, ignoring of reality [Source: Raven's Tarot Site]
Biography
A veiled, crowned woman with a crescent moon at her feet, seated in a stone seat between a black pillar with the letter 'B' and a white pillar with the letter 'J' (possibly the entrance to the Temple of Solomon), and backed up by a tapestry depicting palm trees and pomegranates, which covers the view of a great body of water. She holds a partially-obscured scroll, the Torah. This card symbolizes our inner world, the quiet, contemplative, centered search for hidden, occult wisdom and self-knowledge, the unconscious realm of intuition, reflection, inspiration, female mysteries, magic, and psychic powers. The card may often double up with Triptic Goddess imagery. A mythological parallel would be the story of Persephone, the Greek goddess of springtime who afterwards became the Queen of the Underworld after eating pomegranate seeds. She often is a Threshold Guardian, and associated with the Moon. Things seem strange and mysterious now, but don't worry, sometimes it's a good thing to take a moment to think about your situation and pay attention to your gut feelings before you make your next move. The dark side of the High Priestess is a person who either is too wrapped up in their own inner world — disregarding the physical, outer world in the process —, or who cannot access their inner landscape (or is deliberately ignoring or repressing it), along with their own intuition, instincts, and emotions.