What does your brain react to?
What logic drives your moves?
Opportunities or problems that seem to be solvable are not just end in a bad ending, but they are important, but if they are wrongly touched, the loss can easily be taken for granted.
While the importance of realistically attainable goals, responsibilities, and improvement points is particularly high, the entry bidding also increases.
If it works well, it reduces the unstable platform and the fast entry, and if it is overheated, it can delay the start, keeping the opportunity for a long time.
Small errors or mood swings can be caught off guard.
The incoming real-world signal is not easily passed over, but is treated as an immediate event, leading to any problems that may arise.
Excitement and anxiety rise rapidly, but the power to calm it gently is weak.
He has a strong focus and control over tasks he considers important.
Especially strength comes from the benchmark alignment, error correction, risk blocking, end-compression, and responsibility-carrying side.
When healthy, they have high performance and stability, and in overheating, exceptions may be allowed and timing of corrections may be delayed.
When you're alone, internal simulation is easier to run than an abstract story to solve real problems, check standards, correct, and prevent risks.
In a good direction, this becomes practical thinking and strong readiness to execute.
The bad way is to take the problem too seriously and repeat the structuring and control simulation.
It's easier to see how consistent, reliable, and safe a person is than to warmly join them.
When it's good, you quickly find someone you can trust and work with them in a stable way.
When overheated, people are only seen as structural and functional, and emotional aspects can be enhanced without getting enough of the street and control.
Tension, anger, displeasure, anger can all go unnoticed.
But rather than taking care of it gently enough, it's easy to handle in a way that is simple enough to control, why, where, and how.
A burdy can suddenly overheat or a pattern can emerge that deals with body signals only as a problem-solving tool.
They are deeply immersed in the subject matter they feel is important.
Especially the problems to be solved, the errors to be avoided, the variables to be controlled, are long-term focuses.
Overheating can cause blindness to narrow and the timing of correction to be missed by being tied to one object for too long.
Memory is more than just feelings, it's easy to focus on what happened, where it went wrong, what should never be repeated, and how to stop it.
In particular, moments of failure, error, breach of standards, breaking of trust, and the possibility of large losses can last a long time.
Significant past mistakes or lost experiences can make current judgments more conservative and more difficult.
How do you come across to others?
They may seem outwardly outspoken, have clear standards, are not too quick to overlook important things, and are not easily mistaken.
While it is best to catch a real signal and make a direct judgement before looking away, the reaction can remain a relatively cautious and controlled tone rather than a direct turnaround.
Rather than simply being a cold person, he is more likely to be a weight-stabilizing person.
The wording is usually a strong blend of reality, standards, importance, action, boundaries.
Common phrases often sound like this.
Now this is not a matter of just passing through.
Let's see where the problem is.
That's not right by the standards.
If you miss it, it can get bigger.
We need to get it right now and stop it.
That is, words can come out in a way that requires action rather than just emotions, but that is to say, they can be made to grasp reality, structure, and guard against loss.
DRLCG is not a completely closed-off side to humans.
When trust is feasible, realistically persuasive, and risk is low, energy can be attached to the relationship.
But the opening here is not a mere socializing, but a way of managing relationships that we consider important by actual action and responsibility.
Their initial interpersonal style usually looks like this.
sees the other's reaction quickly - -
checks for reliability and consistency
See the risk.
if convinced, carefully intervene.
the response is clear and substantial
doesn't take the relationship lightly
This type of upper class is more about organizing the problem so that it can be realistically solved than the emotional one.
For example, things like this come out naturally.
It wasn't a simple thing to do.
You have a reason to be so careful.
Let's start by figuring out what's wrong.
But because a is weak, practical theory and protective controls are more likely to come first than warm wrapping.
When conflict arises, because the real problems and violations of standards become stronger,
It can quickly pinpoint the wrong point, the distorted point, the more dangerous point, the point to avoid than a simple argument.
And because C is involved, there may be pressure to make it clear rather than just overstep.
Common patterns include:
quick fix of the problem point
Explain why that is a problem in structure.
to try to correct emotions and actually take a direction.
Not easily covering up for a conflict once perceived as important.
Resolution pressure and control pressure are strong
Rather than being lightly spread on the outside, complacency is often expressed by weight, responsibility, careful practical action.
It often looks like this.
He'll take care of it first.
really helps
keeps his promise
It resolves the other's problem.
discusses matters of importance
not trying to make the relationship a fictional one.
That is, dislike is easily manifested not only in words but also through actual intervention and stabilizing action.
Humor is more than just a wholly emotional joke,
Real-world capture + situation ordering + sharp fiddling can come close.
Sometimes, a recent flaw or inefficiency is quickly caught and turned into a laughing matter, or a situation that is too heavy can be made into a laugh by clicking on it briefly and accurately.
When burnout hits, the following changes tend to show clearly.
small problems are accepted by large.
the words become sharper.
more forward to the problem than the person.
Excessive blocking and control pressure
not resting and trying to keep it tidy
It explodes suddenly or suddenly closes.
From the outside, it looks like it's a good idea.
A person who is clearly overly hard-working and overly pressurized may appear to be a controlled obsessive, and a stabilizing tendency may seem like a controlled one.
But internally, the G-weighting continues to be released into the D-L-C control loop, and weak anchors are increasing.
A healthy DRLCG usually looks like this.
The reality is that judgments are quick.
the criteria are clear
not take the important things lightly
cautious but practical
there is responsibility - there is responsibility
incredible
strong, but the Hutuuru is not moving
That is, not just a cautious person.
They are likely to look like a person who sees reality, takes it seriously, builds structures, and in a safer way actually and stabilizes.
How close can you get to each type?
26 / 26 types shown