This document discusses the importance of balance across different traits and abilities. While some scores may be higher or lower than average in certain areas, it is not necessarily good or bad as long as overall tendencies balance out and do not cause daily challenges. The ideal is a well-rounded profile rather than just focusing on high scores alone. Maintaining perspective is key.
This document discusses the importance of balance across different traits and abilities. While some scores may be higher or lower than average in certain areas, it is not necessarily good or bad as long as overall tendencies balance out and do not cause daily challenges. The ideal is a well-rounded profile rather than just focusing on high scores alone. Maintaining perspective is key.
This document discusses the importance of balance across different traits and abilities. While some scores may be higher or lower than average in certain areas, it is not necessarily good or bad as long as overall tendencies balance out and do not cause daily challenges. The ideal is a well-rounded profile rather than just focusing on high scores alone. Maintaining perspective is key.
“The ideal thing is not just getting all high scores,” Stein says, “it’s about balance.” That means that my low score for flexibility—62 in a normal range of around 40–145—isn’t necessarily “bad.” But it also means that my comparatively high score for “emotional self-awareness,” for instance (121), isn’t fundamentally “good.” The real question is whether my tendencies in other areas stack up in ways that counter any day-to-day challenges of being so stubbornly routine- bound.
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Class notes Organization Brainstorming Thinking ahead