Nikki Freeman (Post-Wish) mbtiパーソナリティタイプ
個性
"Nikki Freeman (Post-Wish)はどのような性格タイプですか? Nikki Freeman (Post-Wish)は、ENFJ in MBTI、2w3 - SX2 - 287 in Enneagram、 in Big 5、EIE in socionics のパーソナリティタイプです。"
i see her as ENFJ sx2w3 I've seen people call Freaky Nikki an 8, a yandere, a psychopath, even a sexual 4, and honestly I think all of those miss what's actually scary about her. The movie never gives me the impression that she wants power over Bear. If anything, she seems convinced she's making him happy. That's the part that makes her unsettling. A lot of possessive characters know they're crossing boundaries and just don't care. Freaky Nikki feels different. She acts like every boundary she crosses is completely reasonable because, in her mind, they're already in the kind of relationship where those boundaries shouldn't exist. That's why I lean ENFJ. She reminds me of someone who has already decided what the relationship means and then starts interpreting everything through that conclusion. Bear avoids her? Something must be wrong. Bear looks uncomfortable? He's probably overwhelmed. Bear rejects her? He doesn't really mean it. Notice how the answer is never "maybe he doesn't want this." That possibility barely seems to exist for her. The reason I don't see ESFJ is that ESFJs usually pay attention to social feedback. Freaky Nikki is weirdly bad at it. Bear can practically have a panic attack in front of her and she'll somehow come away thinking they just need to spend more time together. She's not reading the room. She's reading the story in her head. And the story is always the same: Bear loves her, Bear needs her, they're meant to be together. Everything gets forced into that framework. The sx2 typing feels almost obvious to me. People hear Type 2 and imagine a sweet supportive friend. Unhealthy sx2 is a completely different animal. It's probably the enneagram type most likely to confuse love with emotional fusion. Freaky Nikki doesn't seem interested in having a relationship. She wants to become the relationship. She doesn't really have goals anymore. She doesn't have much of a life outside Bear. She doesn't even seem to care whether he's enjoying her company. The only thing that matters is maintaining the connection. That's why I don't buy the idea that the curse simply makes Nikki "more loving." The curse basically takes the desire to be loved by one person and removes every mechanism that normally keeps it healthy: self-awareness, boundaries, shame, independence, perspective. What's left is Freaky Nikki. The funniest thing about the movie is that on paper she's exactly what a lot of lonely people think they want. A girl who's obsessed with you. Always texts first. Always chooses you. Always wants to be around you. Never loses interest. Never leaves. Then the movie spends ninety minutes explaining why that would be a nightmare. My biggest takeaway is that Freaky Nikki isn't scary because she hates Bear. She's scary because she genuinely believes every terrifying thing she does is an act of love. That's a lot harder to deal with than a villain who's openly malicious, because there's never a moment where she thinks she's the problem.





















