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If these goals and principles are noble, Adventurers can act with amazing
charity and selflessness – but it can also happen that people with the
Adventurer personality type establish a more self-centred identity, acting
with selfishness, manipulation and egoism. It’s important for Adventurers
to remember to actively become the person they want to be. Developing
and maintaining a new habit may not come naturally, but taking the time
each day to understand their motivations allows Adventurers to use their
strengths to pursue whatever they’ve come to love.
Adventurer Weaknesses:
ADVENTURER RELATIONSHIPS:
Adventurers are quite mysterious and difficult to get to know. While very
emotional individuals, they guard this sensitive core carefully, preferring
to listen than to express. People with the Adventurer personality type
focus instead on their partners, with little interest in dictating the mood
of a situation with their own feelings. While this can sometimes be
frustrating, if they are accepted for who they are, Adventurers prove to
be warm, enthusiastic partners.
it’s important for their partners to make it clear that this love and
attention is valued. Adventurers would never ask for such thanks, but it
can really hurt their feelings if they don’t hear it. Such expressions don’t
have to be verbal – Adventurers believe in actions, not words – but it’s
crucial that they know their feelings are shared. On the other side of the
spectrum, there are few types more vulnerable to criticism and conflict,
and it’s necessary to provide a certain level of emotional support.
Still, developing some skill with planning can be a healthy area of growth
for Adventurers. Learning to be a little more comfortable with voicing
their feelings and communicating more clearly is something their partners
can also help with. In any case, sharing the Observant (S) trait usually
smooths out the more challenging aspects of mutual understanding, and
relationships with people who have the Extraverted (E) and Judging (J)
traits helps Adventurers to learn and grow in real, attainable ways.
ADVENTURER FRIENDS:
In friendship, Adventurers are some of the most comfortable people
around. Laid back and spontaneous, people with the Adventurer
personality type won’t bog things down with arguments or structured
long-term plans. Intellectually exhausting pastimes like debates over
European economic policy won’t hold their attention long. The here-and-
now is what’s important to Adventurers, and they love spending time with
their friends doing casual, fun activities.
This mind-set can hold them back from many of their ideal careers, such
as psychology, counselling and teaching, which require long-term
planning and often extensive certifications to get started. It takes a great
deal of energy for Adventurers to maintain focus on a single goal like that
for so long, but it can make the day-to-day so much more rewarding for
the rest of their lives.
Yet Adventurers can be easily tripped up in areas where their kind and
practical attitude is more of a liability than an asset. Whether it is
navigating interpersonal conflicts, confronting unpleasant facts, pursuing
self-realization, or managing your workload, you need to put in a
conscious effort to develop your weaker traits and additional skills.
INSIGHT:
Adventurers always know just the compliment to soften a heart that’s getting
ready to call their risks irresponsible or reckless.
Adventurers’ relaxed, non-judgmental attitudes make it easy for them to get
along with others, but it’s not always the same way around.
Adventurers are the least likely personality type to enjoy influencing the
actions of others.
I change during the course of a day. I wake and I’m one person, and when I go to
sleep I know for certain I’m somebody else.
-Bob Dylan