1. Pessoas e Personagens
  2. Filmes
  3. Tangled (2010)

Mother Gothel tipo de personalidade mbti

Personalidade

"Que tipo de personalidade é Mother Gothel? Mother Gothel é um tipo de personalidade ESFJ em mbti, 3w2 - sx/sp - 386 em enneagram, SLOEN em Big 5, ESE em sociônicos."

Let me play the devil's advocate here and go with ESFJ—an unhealthy one, to be exact. At her core, Mother Gothel was a manipulator and gaslighter. Nothing about her was authentic, and her methods were toying with people's emotions. She was vain and craved the compliments of men. She wanted to be the center of attention, as suggested by her past as a stage actress. To get her way, she pulls different social tricks up her sleeve, like putting up a persona, bargaining, and self-victimizing. Gothel was a slave to society's expectations. She wanted eternal youth to keep up appearances. Everything she did up to her death was to be seen as beautiful and amazing to society. Yes, Te and Fe can be both manipulative. Manipulation is behavior at best, not cognition. Te and Fe can resemble each other since they're both constantly adapting to external data and making decisions. But by considering Mother Gothel's background and intentions, what she wanted was what society valued, not what society deemed reasonable. This is what sets Fe and Te apart. The problem with Fe being stereotyped as "caring for other people" is that it creates misconceptions of how this cognitive function works. "Extraverted judging" simply "decides externally" (external logic or other people) as opposed to "introverted judging" which "decides internally" (subjective logic or self). When one thinks a lot about external value, caring for others is simply, in effect, a byproduct of external focus. Whether you care enough to safeguard the well-being or induce the misery of others, as long as it involves external value, the decision is undoubtedly of Fe origin. Now that I've prefaced that, scrutinize Gothel and her decisions. - When Rapunzel wants to pursue the floating lanterns, what was Gothel's approach? Emotion. She tells Rapunzel how she would feel if she left, hoping she would give up. - Why did she bribe the brothers? Emotion. She knows they're thieves and understands what they value most. - Why did she knock out the brothers when Rapunzel was near? Emotion. She wanted to portray a savior persona so Rapunzel would willingly run back to her (I did mention she was a stage actress). - Why did she stab Eugene? Emotion. She knows it would bring Rapunzel great distress, establishing the consequences of following her emotions instead of Gothel's. Because of it's external nature, Fe can come off as objective and almost logical. It's natural to think that she's talented at scheming. However, you have to acknowledge that all these decisions are based on emotion, value, sentimentality, etc. If anything, Gothel's "thinking" or logical approach is a good display of a character whose inferior function is influenced by the dominant. When an IxTP approaches the world through Fe, they are "finding logic in value." (Is appealing to their emotions the right approach?) When Ti is your constant mode of decision-making, you'll find Fe to be a threat to your inner world, so you try and justify using logic to mask emotion. Switch it around. When an ExFJ approaches the world through Ti, they are "finding value in logic." (Is being right appealing to their emotions?") When Fe is your constant mode of decision-making, you'll find Ti to be a threat to your outer world, so you try and justify using emotion to mask logic. Hence, we see the latter line of thinking happen throughout Tangled. Gothel excessively tries to be right (always insisting that "Mother Knows Best") to keep a status quo that she valued; a status quo where she is veneered by youth and compliments. Now that I've seen a good example of evil Fe-dom in Homelander, I am now extra confident with my vote since I've seen them mirroring each other's personalities (emotion as a tactical appeal).

Biografia

A wicked crone who retained youth for hundreds of years through the healing properties of a magic, golden flower. When the flower's powers were unintentionally transferred to the hair of Rapunzel, Gothel kidnapped the princess and locked her away in a secluded tower, where she hoarded Rapunzel's healing magic.

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