| Although discovering your basic
personality type is the primary object of
the RHETI, it also provides more information
about your personality and its dynamics.
In most cases, the highest score is your
basic personality type; however,
occasionally the basic type may be only two
or three points higher than another type, or
several types may be equal. There may also
be other unusual results that we will
discuss here briefly.
For a detailed analysis of your RHETI
scores, please contact
us.
The Types as Functions
Each of the personality types embodies a
wide range of behaviours and attitudes. Each
of the types can be seen as a metaphor or
symbol of the full range of human potential.
Seen this way, the nine personality types of
the Enneagram are psychological
"functions" or "domains"
of an archetypal power or capacity of human
nature. One reason we are all similar is
that all nine functions operate in each of
us. One reason we are all different is that
their proportion and balance within our
psyches is different and constantly
shifting.
Don Riso and Russ Hudson have used to
main words to describe each Function because
each personality type represents two major
areas of activity—a Function that
characterizes an internally held attitude of
the type, and a Function that characterizes
the type's observable behaviour.
Understood as a series of interrelated
psychological Functions, the nine
personality types of the Enneagram reveal
the full range of one's personality assets
and liabilities. The balance of the
Functions in each person (as indicated by
the RHETI scores) produces that person's
distinctive psychological
"fingerprint"—and while the
basic type is uppermost and should remain
constant, the other Functions in the overall
pattern create a unique pattern that also
changes over time.
Furthermore, equal in importance to
discovering which are the most developed
types (or highest RHETI scores) is to note
the areas that a person is least developed
in (as reflected by his or her lowest RHETI
scores). The highest scoring types are
Functions or areas of potential that the
person has already activated, while the
lowest scoring types are Functions or areas
that the person still needs to be aware of
and to consciously further develop.
Looked at from the viewpoint of the
Functions, our basic personality type can
thus be seen for what it actually is—a
dominant Function around which we have
organized our central response to
reality—while the other eight types
represent the wide range of potentials that
exist within us but are constantly changing.
In The Feeling Triad
TYPE TWO, The
Helper: The Functions of Empathy
and Altruism—the potential for
other-directedness, thoughtfulness for
others, genuine self-sacrifice, generosity,
and nurturance. Negatively, the potential
for intrusiveness, possessiveness,
manipulation, and self-deception.
TYPE THREE, The
Achiever: The Functions of Self-Esteem
and Self-Development—The potential
for ambition, self-improvement, personal
excellence, professional competence,
self-assurance, and social self-distinction.
Negatively, the potential for pragmatic
calculation, arrogant narcissism, the
exploitation of others, and hostility.
TYPE FOUR,
The Individualist: The Functions of Self-Awareness
and Artistic Creativity—The
potential for intuition, sensitivity,
individualism, self-expression, and
self-revelation. Negatively, the potential
for self-absorption, self-consciousness,
self-doubt, self-inhibition, and depression.
In The Thinking Triad
TYPE FIVE, The
Investigator: The Functions of Mental
Focus and Expert Knowledge—The
potential for curiosity, perceptiveness, the
acquisition of knowledge, inventive
originality, and technical expertise.
Negatively, the potential for speculative
theorizing, emotional detachment,
eccentricity, social isolation, and mental
projections.
TYPE SIX, The
Loyalist: The Functions of Trust and
Perseverance—The potential for
emotional bonding with others, group
identification, sociability,
industriousness, loyalty to others, and
commitment to larger efforts. Negatively,
the potential for dependency, ambivalence,
rebelliousness, anxiety, and inferiority
feelings.
TYPE SEVEN,
The Enthusiast: The Functions of Spontaneity
and Diverse Activity—The potential
for enthusiasm, productivity, achievement,
skill acquisition, and the desire for change
and variety. Negatively, the potential for
hyperactivity, superficiality,
impulsiveness, excessiveness, and escapism.
In The Instinctive Triad
TYPE EIGHT, The
Challenger: The Functions of Self-Assertion
and Leadership—The potential for
self-confidence, self-determination,
self-reliance, magnanimity, and the ability
to take personal initiative. Negatively, the
potential for domination of others, crude
insensitivity, combativeness, and
ruthlessness.
TYPE NINE, The
Peacemaker: The Functions of Receptivity
and Interpersonal Mediation—The
potential for emotional stability,
acceptance, unself-consciousness, emotional
and physical endurance, and creating harmony
with others. Negatively, the potential for
passivity, disengaged emotions and
attention, neglectfulness, and mental
dissociation.
TYPE ONE, The
Reformer: The Functions of Ethical
Standards and Responsibility—The
potential for moderation, conscience,
maturity, self-discipline, and delayed
gratification. Negatively, the potential for
rigid self-control, impersonal
perfectionism, judgmentalism, and
self-righteousness.
Other Patterns and Questions
Fluctuating Scores
If you take the RHETI several times, your
basic type should remain the same, although
you will probably find that the scores for
the other types will rise or fall depending
on other influences in your life. Someone
having problems with a significant
relationship, for instance, is likely to
register higher or lower scores in types
associated with concerns about
relationships, such as Two, Six, and Nine.
Likewise, someone who has been putting a
lot of time and energy into work or is
having career problems is likely to produce
elevated scores in types Three, Eight, and
One. After the troubled relationship or the
career issues have been resolved (one way or
another), the profile for that the person
may change yet again. The scores for the
person's basic personality type may also be
affected, although the type itself will
remain the same.
Wings
Your (dominant) wing is indicated by the
higher score of one of the types on either
side of your basic type. For example, if you
test as a Two, your wing will be One or
Three, whichever has the higher score.
The second highest overall score on the
RHETI is not necessarily that of the wing.
For instance, a Six's second highest score
may be Nine; this does not mean that his or
her wing is Nine. (Look at the scores for
Five and Seven; the higher is the Six's
wing.)
In all cases, the proportion of the wing
to that of the basic type must be taken into
consideration. Some people will have a
relatively high wing score, in proportion to
their basic type. Some will have a moderate,
or even a low, proportion of wing to basic
type. This consideration is significant for
understanding a person's reactions and
behaviour, particularly if a prediction of
his or her performance is being attempted,
as in a business setting. Understanding the
relative proportion of the wing to the basic
type also yields insights into the childhood
origins of the person, co-dependency issues,
and potential pathology. (For a complete
explanation of the proportion of wing to
basic type, see Personality
Types, revised edition, 418-421).
You may also get a high score in a wing
other than the one you are expecting because
of current factors in your life. For
example, someone who had been typed both by
himself and by three trained Enneagram
teachers as a Seven with a Six-wing tested
as a Seven with an Eight-wing. In this
instance, although the RHETI correctly
diagnosed the subject's basic type, the wing
differed from what was expected. A
reasonable interpretation is that the
subject is in a high-pressure, competitive
field where self-confidence and initiative
are crucial for success. The subject has
been taking more control of his career and
has been making a conscious effort to be
more assertive. This possibly caused the
subject to register more responses for the
Eight than for the Six.
When assessing your wing, it is always a
good idea to evaluate the test results by
reading the descriptions of both wings in Personality
Types (1996) and deciding which fits you
best.
Close Calls
Occasionally, someone's results will be an
almost even distribution of scores among the
nine types. Of course, the highest score
will usually indicate the basic personality
type. However, in some rare instances, there
may be a tie for the high score, and it will
therefore be difficult to draw conclusions
about the basic type from the evidence of
the test alone. Alternatively, while one
score may be higher than the others, the
scores for several types may be so close
that it is difficult to find easily
recognizable patterns among them. For
example, in a specific case, a subject
scored 19 points—his highest score—in
three types, and 18 points in two others.
There are two explanations for this kind
of close pattern. First, the subject may
have been engaged in therapy or spiritual
development for many years and may have
resolved the problems and conflicts of his
or her personality. (As essence is
developed, personality loses its grip;
hence, the more work a person does on
himself or herself, the more it eventually
becomes difficult to test personality, and
scores would be expected to equalize.) It
should be noted, however, that very few
individuals seem to have attained this
degree of integration and non-identification
with their ego. This explanation should
therefore be applied rarely and with great
caution.
The second explanation for a relatively
close distribution of scores is that the
subject may not have spent much time in
personal development and therefore lacks the
self-knowledge necessary to take the RHETI
properly. (Ironically, this explanation is a
reverse of the first.) In this situation,
the same pattern results from the subject
identification with too many traits
indiscriminately. If this should occur, the
subject's personality type may be found by
having someone who knows him or her well
take the RHETI either with the person or in
the person's place. A subject who has
obtained the same score in several types
should also read the type descriptions on
this website and the longer descriptions in Personality
Types and Understanding
the Enneagram carefully, with particular
attention to the types' motivations, and
then retake the test.
The personality type that most frequently
encounters this difficulty is type Nine.
Nines have problems seeing themselves
because their sense of self is relatively
undefined. They have developed their
capacity to be unselfconscious and receptive
to others and therefore tend to see
themselves in all of the types and in none
very strongly. Moreover, there is also a
tendency for female Nines to misidentify
themselves as Twos and for male Nines to
misidentify themselves as Fives; see Understanding
the Enneagram (revised edition, 2000)
for comparisons between these types.
Furthermore, since Nines also tend to
identify strongly with others, they may
mistakenly apply the personality traits of
loved ones to themselves. For example, Nines
married to Fours may register high scores in
Four because of their identification with
the Four spouse, not necessarily because
they have actually developed the qualities
of a Four themselves.
Nines are not the only type to
misidentify their type, however. Because of
a strongly held self-image, emotional needs,
or social fears, individuals of other types
may have extreme difficulty seeing
themselves accurately and therefore may
produce unexpected (even incorrect) test
results. A Three, for example, may test
almost equally high or higher in another
type because he or she invests a great deal
in projecting a particular image, especially
in his or her career. Threes who want to see
themselves as entrepreneurs may test high in
Eight, or as intellectuals may test high in
Five, or as artists may test high in Four.
It is therefore important to read the full
descriptions of each type and to understand
the person's underlying motivations and
attitudes to make an accurate assessment.
Beyond this, it is worth noting that
while some people may identify their type
correctly, they may not want to admit
aspects of themselves either to themselves
or to anyone else. Obviously, no test of
personality can work unless subjects are
willing and able to look at themselves
honestly.
High Scores Toward Un-health
High scores in a subject's Direction of
Disintegration do not necessarily mean that
the person is unhealthy. It is possible
either that the person has integrated around
the Enneagram and is developing the positive
aspects of the Function that is symbolized
by that type or that temporary circumstances
in the person's life are eliciting aspects
of the type.
The RHETI does not purport to measure
health or un-health, self-actualization or
pathology. The primary concern of this test
is to determine your basic personality type,
and any other conclusions drawn from the
test are relatively speculative.
Furthermore, the statements for each type
have been designed to fall within the healthy
to average range of the Levels of
Development, that is, between Levels 3 to 6
on the Continuum. It would therefore be
virtually impossible for pathology to be
discovered by this test. High scores in a
type in your Direction of Disintegration
may, however, indicate a tendency to respond
with behaviour weighted toward the
low-average end of the Continuum. While this
could alert you to an "unhealthy"
tendency, the RHETI does not diagnose
neuroses or mental disorders. Remember that
if the type in your Direction of
Disintegration is understood as a
psychological Function, the type is part of
your overall personality and, as such, must
be integrated into it. All types, no matter
how high or low they score on this test,
must be taken into consideration.
To further analyze your scores for any
type, carefully read the set of 32
statements for the type in Section 7 of Discovering
Your Personality Type (1995).
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