Personality Types in Culture: The Evolution of the Rebel

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on January 07, 2020

Rebels have been part of our culture since the beginning of story telling. Sometimes they’re the good guys, the heroes who stand up for the poor, the weak and the ones without voices. Sometimes they’re the outcasts; the misfits and dreamers who don’t belong. But they always served a moral purpose, teaching a lesson about right and wrong on both individual and societal scales.

Should You Turn Your Hobby Into a Business?

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on January 06, 2020

Do friends just happen to stop in when you’re baking cookies or homemade pies? Or maybe you knit trendy hats and scarves to give as gifts, or fix relatives’ computers for free just because you can.

Most likely, people have often remarked, “With your talent, you should open a business!”

You smile and shake your head, answering, “I just do it on the side for fun.” But in the back of your mind, you’ve considered it. Wouldn’t it be great to chuck your nine-to-five grind and be your own boss?

Why We Can All Develop Even Blends of Extraversion and Introversion

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on January 05, 2020

Ambiverts have contemplative ideas like an Introvert and also possess the ability to sell or implement those ideas in a competitive environment like an Extravert. This ability to ‘flex’ with the situation is widely valued in society. Known as the ambivert’s advantage, even blends of extraversion and introversion are in demand in the workplace and in personal spheres. As a result, ambiverts tend to find greater opportunities in their relationships and careers than people who sit at the more extreme ends of the personality spectrum.

How to Cope as an Enneagram Type 4 Under Stress

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on December 17, 2019

Enneagram Type 4s are the Individualists of the Enneagram. Fours are sensitive, creative, and expressive people who are interested in finding and understanding their own identity. While they crave close, intimate relationships, others may find them quiet, reserved, and hard to get to know.

3 Personality Traits INTPs Can Adapt to Thrive in Corporate America

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on December 17, 2019

When it comes to thriving in the corporate world, INTP personality types stand on shaky ground. We know that INTPs with their analytical minds are creative problem solvers, loyal to their organizations and are great at addressing complex technical issues. They have a reputation for working incredibly hard to exceed their own high standards.

How Your Texting Habits Reveal Your Personality

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on December 15, 2019

Texting is a huge part of our world now and how you compose your messages, tweets, emails and other forms of online communication can reveal a lot about your personality. Do you deliberately text in lowercase? Are emojis always a part of your messages? Maybe you use periods after each sentence? Personally, I’m a fan of correct punctuation and direct, slightly formal communication.

How Your Personality Gets Your Attention (and What to Do When it’s Angry)

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on December 10, 2019

Does your personality feel like a mischievous kid sometimes?

Just when you think you’ve got a handle on things, you feel yourself melting into a blob of complete and utter… whatever. Bored to the roots of the hair on your toes. Or you find yourself floating perfectly still and everything inside you is chaotic energy and your hands wring hot and frozen and your chest beats hollow with barely enough space for your lungs to stretch. Your head is full of pinpricks and nobody had better come near you right now.

8 Surprisingly Creative Options for ISTJ Careers

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on December 09, 2019

If you’ve been caught singing in the shower lately, cheering on The Great British Bake Off, or out with a girlfriend at one of those “sip n dip” enterprises where you paint a scene on an actual canvas with actual paint while drinking wine, then you, my fellow ISTJ, could be in actual denial. Or tears. Either way, you have discovered that somewhere inside your tidy, alphabetized life, you have room for a little creative flair.

7 INTP Famous People Outside of STEM Fields

Clinically Reviewed by Steven Melendy, PsyD. on December 08, 2019

Picture a typical INTP. What comes to mind? The spunky mad scientist who hasn’t seen daylight in the last three months? How about the mathematician with zero social skills? These images couldn’t be further from the truth. INTPs can and do excel in a variety of fields outside of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, with their own offbeat and individualistic flair.

Latest Tweets

Get Our Newsletter