ENNEAGRAM ONE TWO THREE FOUR FIVE SIX SEVEN EIGHT NIINE TYPES

ENNEAGRAM TYPES:

Basic Fear

Basic Desire

ONE The Reformer

Of being bad, imbalanced, defective, corrupt

To be good, to have integrity

TWO The Helper Of being unloved

To feel love

THREE The Achiever Of being worthless

To feel valuable

FOUR The Individualist

Of having no identity or significance

To be themselves

FIVE The Investigator

SIX The Loyalist

SEVEN The Enthusiast

Of being helpless, incompetent, or incapable

Of being without Of being trapped in

support or guidance

pain and

deprivation

To be capable and competent

To have guidance and support

To be satisfied and content

EIGHT The Challenger

Of being harmed, controlled, and violated

To protect themselves

NIINE The Peacemaker

Of loss, separation, and fragmentation

Peace of mind and wholeness

In Search of...

Integrity and improvement

Intimacy

Acceptance and validation

Identity

mastery

Security and Safety

Satisfaction and fulfillment

Survival

Harmony and stability

Healthy Sense of Self

Hidden Complaint

Virtue

Fixation

Deadly Sin

Main Temptation

Saving Grace

"I am a reasonable, objective person"

"I am right most of the time; others

should listen to me"

Serenity

Resentment (Judging) Anger

(Resentment) Extreme sense of

personal moral obligation

Objective and sensible

"I am a caring, loving person"

"I am always loving--others take

me for granted"

Humility

Flattery (Ingratiation)

Pride

Without needs, well-intentioned

Genuine empathy

"I am an outstanding effective person"

"I am an intuitive, "I am an intelligent, sensitive person" perceptive person"

"I am a superior person--others are

jealous of me"

"I don't really fit in--I am different from others"

"I am so smart-others can't

understand me"

Truthfulness, Authenticity Vanity (Deceit)

Deceit (Vanity)

Equinamity, Emotional Balance

Melancholy (Fantasizing)

Envy

Nonattachment

Stinginess (Retention)

Avarice

To constantly push themselves to be

"the best"

To overuse imagination in search of self

To replace direct experience with

concepts

Desire to be accepted

Self-awareness

Awareness of own distortions

"I am a committed, dependable person"

"I do what I am supposed to do--

other's don't"

Courage

Cowardice (Worrying)

Fear (Anxiety)

tendencles of indecision--seek

others for reassurance Ability to maintain relationships

"I am a happy enthusiastic

person"

"I am a strong assertive person"

"I am a peaceful, easygoing person"

"I am happy-iif others gave me what I wanted, I'd

be happier"

Sobriety

"I am fighting for my survival--others would take advantage of me"

"I am content-others pressure me

to change"

Innocence

Action

Planning (Anticipation)

Gluttony

To think that fulfillment is somewhere else

Vengeance (Objectification)

Lust (Forcefullness)

To think that they are completely self-

sufficient

Indolence (Daydreaming)

Sloth (Disengagement)

To avoid conflicts and self-assertion

Enthusiasm for the things they love

Knows that confrontations threaten survival

Value relationships, so receptive to change

Spiritual Jump Starts, Notice when we are..

Unconscious Childhood Message

Value-judging condemning self

and others

"It's not okay to make mistakes"

Giving away value to others

"It's not okay to have your own

needs"

Trying to be other than you

authentically are

"it's not okay to have your own

feelings and identity"

Making negative comparisons

"It's not okay to be too functional or too

happy"

Overinterpreting your experience

"it's not okay to be comfortable in the

world"

Becoming dependent on something external

for support "It's not okay to trust yourself"

Anticipating what you are going to do

next

"it's not okay to depend on anyone

for anything"

Trying to force or control life

"It's not okay to be vulnerable or to trust anyone."

Resisting being affected by experiences

"It's not okay to assert yourself"

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