alcea rosea
New member
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2007
- Messages
- 3,658
- MBTI Type
- ENFP
- Enneagram
- 7w6
Your score is 57, on a scale of 0 (low self-monitor) to 100 (high self-monitor). You are neither a high nor low self-monitor.
For anyone who has read any of the books or knows a lot about the subect, do you have any idea what percentage of the population are high self-monitors?
:horor: 86!!!
*shakes fist at Economica for posting this evil test*
Oh, girl, you're such a Tool of The Man!
Haight should have the work by Snyder I described earlier -- he was actually the one who indirectly recommended it to me.![]()
I think my issue with Snyder is that he did not seem to distinguish between people who have high monitoring because they're naturally chameleons, whose "true self" is to mirror others in order to affirm and support them, versus high monitors who suffer anxiety because they do not have an intuitive grasp of how to navigate through the natural conflict of just "being themselves."
Unforunately his response was, "The percentage is low." I figured that much without reading the damn book.
The online test in the thread definitely had questions geared towards extroverted self-monitors. I'm not concerned with pleasing people or the external world in general. Rather, I want to keep people out of my internal world, so I self-monitor. I wouldn't say that it's because I don't know how to be myself, it's just that I don't think other people deserve to see that side of me.
Just realized. That this was a response to the running convo. you were having with Economica, not a response to substitutes post.
True? If not, why did his post make you want to lie down?
Anyway, what I am getting at is that potentially some of the extroverted types naturally begin and end with the outer world -- that is where their identity is -- and the way they mold themselves to it is not actually a rejection of their inner self.
Introverts I would think would be more likely to high-monitor as a costume to protect potential damage done to a weak or unconfident self-image.
Yeah, I hate to throw a spanner in the works, but although I adapt like a mofo and pretty much chameleon into whatever a situation or crowd most wants/requires, I DO NOT view this as not being myself and I do believe that this behaviour IS exactly in line with my inner self. Because my inner self believes that it's important and useful to do this, and moreover, I'm still always being the same person, still saying the same things, having the same attitudes and opinions - all I'm doing is 'translating' them into a different presentation, one that's more likely to reach the current audience. I don't change what I think or even the way I think, feel or believe. I just change the way I manifest it; I change the way I present it.
Yeah, I hate to throw a spanner in the works, but although I adapt like a mofo and pretty much chameleon into whatever a situation or crowd most wants/requires, I DO NOT view this as not being myself and I do believe that this behaviour IS exactly in line with my inner self. Because my inner self believes that it's important and useful to do this, and moreover, I'm still always being the same person, still saying the same things, having the same attitudes and opinions - all I'm doing is 'translating' them into a different presentation, one that's more likely to reach the current audience. I don't change what I think or even the way I think, feel or believe. I just change the way I manifest it; I change the way I present it.