That being said, I got a really low score. It was due to stupid statements like:
I will do whatever I can to keep myself from crying.
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What's wrong with that question? How did you answer it?
The assumption is that crying is something that is we either indulge in or retreat from - but there was no "not applicable".
I took the test honestly and got 109 or something. But I was thinking -- I knew how to answer the questions in a "more emotionally intelligent" way. Shouldn't your score be indicative of what you understand about emotions as opposed to linked to something behavioral?
The assumption is that crying is something that is we either indulge in or retreat from - but there was no "not applicable".
If you don't try to stop yourself from crying, you don't try to stop yourself from crying. That has nothing to do with whether you are actually prone to crying or not.
I chose the, "I don't hold back" option, which is the probably the most emotionally healthy answer. I don't cry, ever, but if I was about to, I wouldn't try to hold it back, and I think that's the point.
I chose the, "I don't hold back" option, which is the probably the most emotionally healthy answer. I don't cry, ever, but if I was about to, I wouldn't try to hold it back, and I think that's the point.
Hmmm, I interpreted that question to mean, "in the case that you feel like crying, do you try hard to hold them back?" If that's what the question means, what other possibilities are there besides either letting the tears flow (indulging) or fighting to hold them back (retreating)?
I suppose you could have interpreted the question to mean, "do you spend a lot of time fighting to hold back your tears?" In that case, the question is about whether or not you feel like crying very often (but hold back the tears). I thought about interpreting it that way, but then decided that it made less sense than the aforementioned interpretation because it doesn't really measure anything. It wouldn't be measuring whether you repress or express your emotions, because people who do either less frequently will both answer negatively to the question. It also doesn't really measure how often a person feels like crying, because those who feel like crying often who don't stifle the tears will answer negatively.
That's why I decided that they must be trying to isolate whether you express or repress emotions with the question, so I should answer how I would in the case that I felt like crying.
That's what I was thinking. I didn't read the instructions so I took the test based on what I thought made the most sense. What I actually understand... I thought whether or not I applied my knowledge was the less important port.
That's why my score was so high. 125. If I answered based on what I actually do, not what I understand to make the most sense, I'm sure I would have had a lot more of an average score. It didn't seem like a "What would I do" test. Based on the questions, it seemed like it was just getting at what I understand - my intelligence about the subject. When something says "What's the most effective outcome?", it's hard for me to not take that literally.
Such a waste of time!
So ironic, as I was just thinking what TheChosenOne must have felt when his efforts came to a fruitless end, while hoping that such a thing wouldn't happen to me.
88. Isn't that enough for mental retardation on the IQ scale?
I'm emotionally retarded. Heheh.