There's a bit of a rhyme and reason to it: Adjacent types usually share issues or approaches: 8 and 7 and for example both feel they need something, the fundamental solution is to figure out if you can get it and and if so how, when a 5 or 1 in contrast will likely rationalize that they didn't want it after all. 4 and 5 are both highly introspective types, just in different areas. 8 and 9, likewise, feel that they are or are in danger of being overlooked, and face that with different strategies. Likewise all the image types all answer their own feeling of inadequacy by aspiring to embody or putting up an image that in their minds should get the recognition they need. You can kind of blend a type together from the adjacent wing-types.
There's a bit of a rhyme and reason to it: Adjacent types usually share issues or approaches: 8 and 7 and for example both feel they need something, the fundamental solution is to figure out if you can get it and and if so how, when a 5 or 1 in contrast will likely rationalize that they didn't want it after all. 4 and 5 are both highly introspective types, just in different areas. 8 and 9, likewise, feel that they are or are in danger of being overlooked, and face that with different strategies. Likewise all the image types all answer their own feeling of inadequacy by aspiring to embody or putting up an image that in their minds should get the recognition they need. You can kind of blend a type together from the adjacent wing-types.
[MENTION=22833]Legion[/MENTION] This is hella cool, thanks for sharing! I'm honestly not one to really care too much about the why with something like Enneagram (because it has a large spiritual element) but I must say that this is really fascinating.
It makes total sense, even, what you've said about starting with 9 as the overall core because it is. 9 is often even called the "crown of the Enneagram" (I believe for that very reason). Even the Composite/Primary combonations you've listed make total sense from a characteristics standpoint-- I even have people of those composite types mistype (or at least consider) the primaries you've associated with them (that are listed above). For example, 9 and 6 are the most frequent types to mistype as a 4, and I've seen almost every Enneagram 1 that I know, consider both 6 and 3 before confirming as Reformers.
Of course, some of that could also be because 6, 3 and 9 are also the types most likely to mistype. We could say that, specifically they often mistype as the composite types that their core is "a part of", but I often wonder if that's why they look like Primary types to begin with-- because they are just the most likely to see themselves in everything. Each has it's own concrete reason for being this way, of course: 6 from a place of indecision and perhaps anxiety, 3 from a lack of self knowledge and long practice of donning masks, 9 from a place of "self forgetting" or being a blank slate.
Where did you find this stuff, out of curiosity? I feel like I read something similar years ago, but can't recall where.
Alright, I just figured it out. I'll type it out, give me a few minutes.
--
3, 6, and 9 are the Primary Types.
1, 2, 4, 5, 7 and 8 are the Composite Types.
Composite types are formed by a Primary type followed by another Primary type.
1 = 63, 2 = 69, 4 = 96, 5 = 93, 7 = 39, 8 = 36
So it goes:
63 - 69 - 3 - 96 - 93 - 6 - 39 - 36 - 9 - 63 ...
As you can see, adjacent types (wings) do not share a Primary type in common IF if it is a Primary followed by a Composite, but they share the first type if it is Composite followed by Composite.
For the hexagonal figure, we can only explain this if we treat Type 9 as the "core type", so it goes:
63 - 39 | 93 - 36 - 69 | 96 - 63 - 39 | 93 ...
So: 9 is the core, then (3, 6, 9) is the next level up, then the full 9 is the third level.
[still a few things to explain, model is incomplete so far]
[so close, yet so far!!!]
(I'll finish it later some time, I'm stuck)
Sorry buddy, but I don't follow you.
You say " 1 = 63, 2 = 69, 4 = 96, 5 = 93, 7 = 39, 8 = 36". How does 1 equal 63 for example? Or 2 equal 69? I'm just not following how do you go from 1 to 63?
They're just similar to those types. (1 is like a 6 and somewhat like a 3)
Don't worry too much about it. I didn't get the full enneagram structure so it's not too relevant.
I'm more interested in integration/disintegration now.
1/9 Ni 4 Fe 2/6/8 Ti 5 Se 3/7 Ne 1 Fi 4/9/2 Te 8 Si 6/5
Congrats on finding your type, by a most unusual method, I might add.
Thanks.
However I think I broke the enneagram. Type 7 is an introverted type now. Shiiiiit!!!![]()
If its broken, does that mean we can fix it and create something new out of it?