All 20 Nine 20 Types
All 20 Nine 20 Types
All 20 Nine 20 Types
Enneagram:
Week
1
For
the
rest
of
this
week
and
the
next,
we
will
explore
each
of
the
nine
individual
Enneagram
types.
We'll
see
how
all
of
us
begin
life
in
union
with
God,
as
our
True
Self,
totally
in
Love.
Each
Enneagram
type
has
a
uniquely
gifted
way
of
being
connected
with
the
Real.
It
reveals
our
original
"soul
space."
Our
Enneagram
passions
or
sins
come
from
the
suffering
and
agitation
caused
by
the
perception
that
we've
been
torn
from
the
womb
of
Love.
The
ego
creates
a
false
self,
trying
to
recreate
the
original
positive
soul
experience.
Eventually,
as
Russ
Hudson
says,
"The
healing
of
the
passion
comes
through
turning
back
toward
the
grace.
Allowing
grace
to
work
us
over
a
long
period
develops
our
virtue."
[1]
Thus,
the
issues
of
the
false
self
are
only
resolved
by
experiencing
our
forgotten
but
real
connection
with
God.
I'm
going
to
start
with
the
ONE
because
it's
the
type
I
understand
best,
and
I
hope
it
will
give
us
a
template
for
the
process
of
transformation
in
all
the
types.
The
primal
knowing
of
ONEs
is
that
the
world
and
we
are
deeply
good.
ONEs
are
originally
joyfully
enthralled
with
the
goodness
and
perfection
of
the
Really
Real.
My
mother
told
me
I
was
so
excited
all
the
time
as
a
boy;
I
would
just
squeal
with
delight
and
dance
and
sing.
It
was
just
a
wonderful
world,
and
I
was
a
part
of
it,
and
I
was
happy
to
be
a
part
of
it!
But
then
the
wound
came.
I
don't
know
what
it
was,
but
somewhere
along
the
way
I
realized
it
isn't
a
perfect
world.
No
childhood
is
ever
perfect.
No
longer
able
to
rest
in
our
original
"home,"
the
ego
tries
to
manufacture
perfection.
ONEs
like
me
move
into
overdrive
to
protect
ourselves
from
our
deep
disappointment.
"I
will
make
it
perfect
anyway.
I'm
going
to
find
a
way
to
make
it
the
way
I
want
it!"
But
good
intentions
can
only
take
us
so
far
when
we
are
not
connected
to
Real
Power.
Here
is
where
evil
disguises
itself
as
good,
and
the
natural
knowing
of
the
True
Self
gets
twisted
into
the
false
self.
ONEs
become
hyper-‐sensitive
to
anything
we
perceive
as
wrong
or
ugly.
Hence
we
become
critical,
judgmental,
and
moralistic.
This
focus
sent
me
off
to
a
seminary
at
a
young
age.
We
are
even
more
critical
of
ourselves
than
we
are
of
everything
else.
Our
root
sin
is
anger
or
resentment-‐-‐resentment
that
things
are
not
the
way
they
should
be.
We're
perfectionists,
and
we're
never
satisfied
with
what
we
could
always
improve.
This
is
my
fallenness,
my
strategy
for
surviving.
It's
been
my
way
of
getting
energy
for
so
long
that
I
cannot
change
it
entirely.
All
I
can
do,
by
God's
grace,
is
move
toward
some
form
of
transformation
that
will
allow
me
to
fall
and
rest
in
my
True
Self.
The
gift
or
virtue
that
marks
mature
persons
of
any
type
is
always
the
reverse
of
the
root
sin,
for
it
is
the
overcoming
of
your
sin
that
becomes
your
greatest
gift.
For
the
ONE,
this
gift
or
virtue
is
serenity,
meaning
a
nonreactive
heart.
Serenity
holds
the
world
with
compassion
and
patience.
As
Russ
Hudson
puts
it,
"Serenity
allows
ONEs
to
be
of
service.
Instead
of
reacting
in
anger
and
irritation,
serenity
lets
ONEs
show
up
in
the
face
of
difficulty,
conflict,
and
suffering
and
see
what's
actually
needed,
what
will
be
most
helpful,
and
what
will
open
things
to
the
good.
Serenity
can
trust
the
goodness,
blessedness,
and
dignity
that's
in
me
and
trust
that
same
goodness,
blessedness,
and
dignity
is
there
somehow
in
the
situation
or
person
in
front
of
me."
[4]
How
do
we
get
from
our
root
sin
to
this
gift?
First,
for
any
type,
it
usually
takes
the
major
humiliation
of
seeing
our
root
sin
for
what
it
is.
I
remember
the
day
when
my
ONEness
became
obvious
to
me
during
a
spiritual
direction
session
in
Cincinnati.
I
was
in
a
daze
of
humiliating
recognitions.
"My
God,
I
became
a
Franciscan
for
the
wrong
reason,
I
became
celibate
for
the
wrong
reason,
I
became
a
priest
for
the
wrong
reason.
Oh
God,
did
I
do
anything
right?"
I
realized
that
I
wasn't
right
at
all.
My
very
best
efforts
stemmed
from
mixed
motives,
to
make
myself
look
good.
This
insight
was
the
initial
death
of
the
false
self.
It
also
set
me
on
a
course
that
has
become
one
of
my
central
themes:
the
understanding
of
reality
as
paradox,
reality
as
a
seeming
contradiction
that
in
a
bigger
frame
is
not
a
contradiction
at
all.
From
our
earliest
years,
we
ONEs
have
lived
with
our
unacknowledged
and
repressed
anger.
When
we
discover
it,
we
can
eventually
get
so
fed
up
with
being
angry
that,
through
the
grace
of
God,
we
finally
learn
to
deal
with
it
better
and
more
constructively
than
others!
It's
still
in
us
just
as
much
as
ever,
and
it
won't
go
away.
But
it
no
longer
needs
to
be
taken
so
seriously.
Instead,
as
Hudson
says,
"the
behaviors
and
reactions
of
our
Enneagram
type
.
.
.
[can
serve
as]
reminders
that
we've
forgotten
what
we
love
and
what's
most
important.
.
.
.
This
is
how
we
turn
our
ego
into
a
friend
rather
than
an
enemy."
[5]
Many
integrated
ONEs
say
that
three
things
help
them:
prayer,
love,
and
nature.
When
I
pray
I
can
increasingly
let
go
of
the
voices
of
duty
and
responsibility
and
let
myself
drop
down
into
God,
into
Love.
Love
is
"the
perfect
bond,"
as
Paul
says
(Colossians
3:14).
That
is
why
I
have
to
fall
in
love
with
somebody
or
something
every
day,
even
if
it's
only
a
tree
or
the
wonderful
turquoise
sky
over
New
Mexico.
When
I
don't
love,
the
negative
voices
immediately
get
the
upper
hand.
Finally,
nature
helps
me
discover
and
accept
perfection
in
the
flux
and
chaos
of
creative
evolution.
God,
love,
and
nature
are
perfect
precisely
because
they
include
and
incorporate
imperfection.
This
is
important!
Without
these
three
experiences,
ONEs
can
scarcely
imagine
cheerful
serenity
and
patience,
but
remain
aggressive
idealists
and
ideologues.
Hudson
describes
ONEs'
unique
gift:
"ONEs
begin
life
with
a
sense
of
the
goodness,
dignity,
and
blessedness
of
all
creation.
.
.
.
The
special
mission
of
the
ONE
is
to
invite
everyone
into
that
fundamental
truth
by
reflecting
that
face
of
God
in
the
world."
[6]
I
hope
I
am
doing
that
somehow
for
you.
References:
[1]
Russ
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
as
a
Tool
for
Your
Spiritual
Journey
(CAC:
2009),
disc
2
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download).
[2]
Ibid.,
disc
3.
[3]
Ibid.,
disc
4.
[4]
Ibid.,
disc
3.
[5]
Ibid.,
disc
2.
[6]
Ibid.,
disc
3.
Adapted
from
Richard
Rohr,
The
Enneagram:
The
Discernment
of
Spirits
(CAC:
2004),
disc
2
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download);
and
Richard
Rohr
and
Andreas
Ebert,
The
Enneagram:
A
Christian
Perspective
(The
Crossroad
Publishing
Company:
2001),
45,
54-‐55.
TWOs,
THREEs,
and
FOURs
make
up
the
heart
triad.
They
are
"other-‐
directed"
people,
whose
wellbeing
depends
on
how
their
environment
reacts
to
them.
Their
continuous
activities
secretly
have
no
other
goal
than
to
be
confirmed
from
the
outside.
We
all
have
this
same
concern
to
some
degree.
It
grows
out
of
the
mirroring
we
received
or
didn't
receive
as
a
child
when
we
were
first
developing
our
sense
of
identity.
"Who
am
I
in
your
eyes?"
is
a
central
question
for
all
the
heart
types.
[1]
TWOs
originally
know
themselves
as
the
beloved
of
the
universe.
They
know
the
truth
that
they
are
specially
loved
and
chosen
by
a
beautiful
and
loving
God.
When
they
cannot
maintain
this
truth,
they
become
manipulative
and
needy
of
the
love
of
others
to
"reconvince"
themselves
of
the
truth
they
already
deeply
know.
"Others
must
and
will
love
me!"
they
demand,
instead
of
resting
in
the
love
that
they
already
are.
They
are
driven
to
love,
help,
and
serve
others,
without
realizing
that
their
motivation
is
the
need
for
others
to
love
them.
TWOs
are
extremely
sensitive
to
the
needs
of
others,
but
not
aware
of
their
own
needs.
What
they
really
want
is
attention.
Although
this
is
a
legitimate
need
for
anyone,
to
TWOs
it
seems
selfish,
and
they
won't
admit
to
it.
In
Russ
Hudson's
words,
"The
root
sin
of
the
TWO
is
pride,
not
in
the
sense
of
showing
off,
but
pride
as
a
kind
of
false
humility."
[2]
Pride
keeps
them
from
seeing
their
own
needs.
TWOs
need
to
be
needed.
For
this
reason
they
are
easy
to
manipulate.
As
soon
as
they
hear
the
little
word
"need,"
they
scrape
together
the
last
remnant
of
their
energy
to
rush
to
help
you.
TWOs
long
to
be
loved,
to
love
with
their
whole
hearts,
and
to
be
allowed
to
live
for
their
beloved.
They
sacrifice
themselves
for
the
welfare
of
others.
They
are
benefactors,
givers,
and
helpers.
They
give
others
precisely
what
they
want
for
themselves.
Their
seeming
altruism
is
a
"legitimate"
form
of
indulging
their
own
egoism.
But
let
me
warn
you:
TWOs
have
another
side.
"Hell
hath
no
fury"
like
TWOs
who
suddenly
realize
that
they
are
doing
all
the
giving
and
not
receiving
what
they
feel
they
deserve
in
return.
They
suddenly
become
the
opposite
of
the
person
they
want
to
be.
They
can
say
extremely
cruel
things.
Then
they
may
run
from
the
room
in
tears
when
they
realize
they've
turned
into
a
"dragon."
TWOs
need
a
great
deal
of
acceptance
and
"soft"
love
before
they
are
ready
to
let
themselves
be
challenged
by
"tough
love."
Sooner
or
later,
however,
this
is
exactly
what
has
to
happen:
a
confrontation,
at
once
loving
and
unsparing,
with
their
own
pseudo-‐love,
self-‐pity,
and
egocentricity.
The
gift
of
TWOs
is
genuine
humility,
the
reverse
of
pride.
When
TWOs
reach
the
point
where
they
recognize
their
real
motives
("I
give
so
I
can
get"),
they
may
cry
for
days.
When
a
TWO
can
finally
cry
tears
of
self-‐
knowledge,
redemption
(healing)
is
near.
At
such
moments,
TWOs
realize
that
they
have
perhaps
damaged
and
injured
other
people
while
supposedly
"wanting
the
best
for
them."
This
is
deeply
humiliating.
TWOs
are
redeemed
from
themselves
the
more
they
experience
God
as
the
real
lover
and
realize
that
their
puny
love
can
only
consist
in
sharing
in
God's
infinite
love.
This
insight
leads
through
a
moment
of
deep
shame
to
genuine
humility.
I
like
the
way
Hudson
says
it:
"Real
humility
is
a
reflection
of
God's
grace
for
us.
It
is
allowing
the
holding
of
our
own
human
limitation
and
being
utterly
gentle,
compassionate,
and
real
about
that."
[3]
Redeemed
TWOs
deeply
and
profoundly
know
their
innate
value
and
preciousness
and
so
don't
need
to
be
continually
affirmed
from
the
outside.
They
are
finally
free.
As
I've
shared
before,
most
problems
are
psychological
and
most
solutions
are
spiritual.
References:
[1]
Russ
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
as
a
Tool
for
Your
Spiritual
Journey
(CAC:
2009),
disc
4
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download).
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
Ibid.
Adapted
from
Richard
Rohr,
The
Enneagram:
The
Discernment
of
Spirits
(CAC:
2004),
disc
2
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download);
and
Richard
Rohr
and
Andreas
Ebert,
The
Enneagram:
A
Christian
Perspective
(The
Crossroad
Publishing
Company:
2001),
45,
64,
66,
68-‐72.
THREEs
began
with
the
primal
knowledge
that
everything
is
unstable
and
passing
and
that
only
God
endures
and
gives
us
the
endurance
to
withstand
the
passing
nature
of
all
things.
But,
at
some
point,
an
experience
of
wounding
convinced
THREEs
that
they
are
separate
from
God
and
Wholeness.
This
perception
makes
THREEs
think
it's
up
to
them
to
keep
things
from
falling
apart.
"I
will
prove
by
competence
and
overproduction
that
I
will
not
fall
apart,"
they
say,
instead
of
resting
in
the
impermanence
and
fallibility
that
they
deeply
know
and
now
deeply
fear.
They
are
afraid
to
look
inside
themselves
because
they
feel
there
is
really
nothing
there.
THREEs
need
endless
successes
and
feedback
to
reassure
themselves
against
a
very
honest
and
realistic
insecurity.
They
are
afraid
to
say
yes
and
cooperate
with
the
dissolution
and
death
of
all
things
unless
they
reconnect
with
the
permanence
and
endurance
of
reality,
which
is
precisely
a
God-‐
experience,
whether
they
call
it
that
or
not.
The
THREE
is
the
central
type
of
the
heart
triad.
It's
harder
for
THREEs
to
perceive
their
own
feelings
than
for
any
other
type.
But
they
are
experts
at
reading
the
people
around
them
and
immediately
knowing
just
what
role
to
play
to
be
successful
in
others'
eyes.
They
can
slip
into
almost
any
mask
that
will
please
the
people
around
them
and
act
the
part
to
perfection.
The
role
protects
and
motivates
them.
They
are
really
looking
for
praise
from
outside,
because
they
often
feel
worthless
inside.
They
identify
with
their
group,
organization,
or
project
and
they
work
very
hard.
They
are
efficiency
experts.
THREEs
are
show-‐people,
achievers,
careerists,
and
status-‐seekers.
They
live
out
of
roles
much
more
than
their
True
Self,
which
they
scarcely
know.
THREEs
are
competitive
and
want
to
be
winners.
"I'm
good
when
I
win"
is
their
motto.
Many
THREEs
are
physically
attractive.
Most
of
them
seem
optimistic,
youthful,
intelligent,
dynamic,
and
productive.
They
run
circles
around
others
because
of
their
amazing
energy.
They
can
sell
anything
because
they
first
sell
you
on
themselves.
Immature
THREEs
have
no
longing
for
depth.
What's
the
point
of
depth
when
superficiality
works
and
when
image
without
content
sells?
THREEs
are
extremely
pragmatic:
if
it
works,
it's
true.
The
question
of
objective
truth
isn't
even
raised.
The
pressure
to
succeed
leads
to
the
root
sin
of
the
THREE,
which
is
deceit.
While
they
don't
generally
go
around
telling
lies,
they
do
embellish
the
truth
and
put
the
best
face
on
everything.
They
create
an
image
that
looks
good,
can
be
sold,
and
can
win.
The
person
they
deceive
the
most
is
their
own
self.
They
have
often
been
so
spoiled
by
success
that
in
the
end
they
believe
everything
they
do
is
good
and
great.
Unredeemed
THREEs
avoid,
fear,
and
hate
failure.
When
it
does
occur,
they
find
ways
to
extricate
themselves.
Sometimes
they
polish
up
their
defeats
and
reinterpret
them
as
victories.
Often
they
blame
others.
And
they
frequently
leave
the
scene
of
the
wreck
as
quickly
as
possible
to
plunge
into
a
new,
promising
project.
THREEs
find
the
way
to
their
gift
of
integrity
only
when
they
take
the
painful
path
of
self-‐knowledge
and
look
their
life-‐lies,
big
and
little,
in
the
face,
refusing
to
gloss
over
them
anymore.
Since
this
is
insight
into
their
own
failure,
it
is
very
difficult
for
them.
THREEs
who
have
found
their
way
to
truthfulness
and
authenticity
can
put
their
tremendous
gifts
to
work
to
help
other
people
competently
and
effectively,
motivating
them
to
discover
their
own
potential.
Redeemed
THREEs
manage
to
organize
groups
or
communities
sensibly,
expose
society's
lies
for
what
they
are,
and
spread
the
truth
in
a
way
that
is
professional,
efficient,
and
up-‐to-‐date.
Their
sin
has
now
become
their
gift.
Reference:
Adapted
from
Richard
Rohr
and
Andreas
Ebert,
The
Enneagram:
A
Christian
Perspective
(The
Crossroad
Publishing
Company:
2001),
46,
81-‐82,
85-‐86,
88.
This
week
we
will
continue
describing
the
Enneagram
types,
focusing
on
the
ways
the
ego
tries
to
falsely
protect
what
it
thinks
is
itself.
As
Russ
Hudson
says,
"We
all
want
something
real;
we're
just
going
about
it
in
a
way
that
can't
work."
[1]
FOURs
once
lived
serenely
as
an
essential
part
of
a
united
and
beautiful
world.
But
one
day
the
union
and
beauty
were
seemingly
broken.
So
for
much
of
their
lives
FOURs
desperately
try
to
create
an
outer
world
of
balance
and
symmetry.
Hudson
describes
the
essence
of
FOUR
as
"the
mystery
of
our
true
identity.
It
feels
oceanic,
deep,
unfathomable,
mysterious.
.
.
.
[FOURs
live
for]
beauty,
intimacy,
and
depth
.
.
.
the
markers
of
drawing
closer
to
our
[original]
union
with
God."
[2]
The
ego
believes
its
job
is
to
recreate
that
original
blessing.
But
nothing
is
as
good
as
the
original,
so
FOURs
are
left
feeling
bereft.
As
much
as
they
strive
to
be
aesthetically
attractive,
to
be
exceptional,
to
be
creative,
"they
can't
stop
feeling
their
grief
for
their
disconnection
from
the
Beloved."
[3]
They
once
knew
the
eternal
wholeness/nothingness
of
God,
and
how
it
included
and
incorporated
the
dark.
Now,
feeling
separate
from
God,
they
often
seem
to
revel
in
suffering
and
darkness.
The
root
sin
of
FOURs
is
envy.
Their
life
is
primarily
shaped
by
longing:
the
longing
for
beauty
and
the
wish
that
the
world
and
life
would
fit
together
into
a
harmonic
whole.
Often
in
their
childhood
they
had
the
experience
of
the
present
being
unbearable
and
meaningless.
This
may
have
been
due
to
a
painful
loss
that
left
them
longing
for
their
lost
love
to
return
and
redeem
them.
Positive
role
models
may
have
been
missing,
so
the
child
turned
toward
their
inner
world
for
identity.
They
became
more
at
home
in
the
realm
of
the
unconscious,
of
symbols
and
dreams,
than
in
the
real
world.
Symbols
help
FOURs
to
be
with
themselves
and
to
express
themselves.
Metaphors
for
reality
are
almost
more
exciting
than
reality
itself,
if
you
are
a
FOUR.
Thus
their
love
of
art,
poetry,
music,
theater,
etc.
Unredeemed
FOURs
may
believe
that
for
some
reason
they
are
guilty
of
causing
the
loss,
rejection,
or
privation,
so
they
consider
themselves
"bad."
This
shame
may
trap
them
in
a
cycle
of
repeatedly
producing
situations
in
which
they
are
rejected
or
abandoned.
It
doesn't
help
that
longing
seems
more
important
to
them
than
having.
As
soon
as
they
possess
the
object
of
their
desires,
they
are
generally
disappointed.
It
is
part
of
their
inability
to
live
in
the
present,
which
is
always
full
of
defects
and
deficits:
as
soon
as
their
longing
is
realized,
there
is
always
something
to
find
fault
with.
FOURs
are
converted
when
they
realize
that
their
identity
is
not
composed
of
the
worst
things
that
have
happened
to
them.
As
Hudson
says,
"What
you
are
is
a
magnificent
mystery,
a
manifestation
of
God,
existing
now.
And
there's
always
the
call
of
the
Beloved,
trying
to
call
us
home,
right
now
to
this
meeting
of
lovers.
In
this
meeting
of
lovers,
we
find
out
who
we
are.
.
.
.
When
we
are
present
it
doesn't
mean
that
the
longing
goes
away,
but
it
is
purified.
Then
we
receive
the
FOUR's
virtue,
which
is
equanimity
.
.
.
a
spaciousness
of
the
heart
that
lets
me
feel
whatever
needs
to
be
felt
without
rejecting
that
feeling
or
adhering
to
it.
So
I
am
not
pushing
any
feelings
away
and
neither
am
I
stuck
in
them
in
perpetual
victimhood.
All
weather
of
the
heart
is
welcome
to
a
healthy
FOUR.
In
that
state
there's
room
and
expansion
for
longing
to
become
a
fire,
a
passion
that
can
take
me
all
the
way
to
the
marriage
that
we
were
all
promised,
of
the
Bride
and
the
Bridegroom."
[4]
Thus
FOURS
often
tend
to
be
pan-‐erotic,
androgynous,
and
seldom
have
any
trouble
understanding
LGBTQ
people.
They
are
much
more
natural
at
non-‐dual
thinking.
References:
[1]
Russ
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
as
a
Tool
for
Your
Spiritual
Journey
(CAC:
2009),
disc
4
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download).
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
Ibid.
[4]
Ibid.
Adapted
from
Richard
Rohr
and
Andreas
Ebert,
The
Enneagram:
A
Christian
Perspective
(The
Crossroad
Publishing
Company:
2001),
46,
98-‐100.
The
primal
experience
of
the
FIVE
was
of
the
absolute
power
and
genius
of
God
in
controlling
all
the
parts
in
one
working
universe.
The
FIVE's
real
power
is
in
the
now.
Once
separated
from
that,
they
experience
a
sort
of
emptiness,
which
the
ego
tries
to
fill
with
knowledge.
Today
I'd
like
you
to
hear
from
Russ
Hudson,
with
whom
I
have
taught
several
times.
Hudson
is
"a
person
with
a
FIVE
personality"
as
he
phrases
it,
emphasizing
"We
are
more
than
our
personalities.
We
are
a
mystery
that
has
taken
a
particular
form
and
flavor
that
is
our
type."
Hudson
describes
the
FIVE:
The
essential
core
of
the
FIVE
is
the
soul's
capacity
to
be
illuminated
and
to
illuminate,
to
make
things
clear.
When
you're
clear,
the
world
becomes
more
transparent.
You
notice
the
littlest
things.
You're
more
awake
to
everything.
That
illumination
is
exactly
the
same
as
what
we
call
recognition.
Whenever
you
have
an
"Ah
ha"
it's
not
thinking,
exactly;
it's
a
recognition
of
truth.
It
fills
your
whole
body.
We
all
experience
that;
if
you're
a
FIVE,
you
live
for
that.
It's
your
specialty.
The
other
side
is
what
I
call
black
light,
or
God's
bug-‐zapper.
If
you're
present,
there's
not
only
the
illumination
of
the
truth,
but
there's
the
clearing
away
of
the
nonsense,
the
delusions,
and
our
false
beliefs
and
ideas.
What
happens
in
FIVEs
with
the
loss
of
their
primal
connection
[with
God]
is
the
loss
of
the
ability
to
discern
reality
from
illusion,
and
it's
terrifying.
What's
safe
and
what's
dangerous?
The
question
for
all
the
head
types
[FIVE,
SIX,
SEVEN]
is
"What
can
I
trust?"
The
FIVE
turns
to
a
reliance
on
the
mind,
but
the
mind
on
this
level
is
disconnected
from
the
Knowing,
so
it
can't
produce
that
illumination.
No
matter
how
much
I
learn,
memorize,
and
cogitate,
I
don't
feel
like
I
know.
The
passion
[or
root
sin]
here
is
avarice.
FIVEs
are
avaricious
for
information
and
also
for
personal
privacy
and
private
space.
Psychologists
would
define
the
old-‐fashioned
word
"avarice"
as
the
schizoid
state,
where
we
just
give
up,
retreat,
and
disconnect
from
our
feelings
and
kinesthetic
awareness.
But
the
FIVE
is
not
dissociative.
The
FIVE
is
not
not
paying
attention.
I'm
paying
a
lot
of
attention,
but
only
with
my
mind.
Everything
else
I
switched
off.
The
core
of
avarice
is
the
contracted
heart,
a
hoarding
of
the
self.
Like
all
the
types,
what
FIVEs
need
to
do
is
what
scares
us
the
most.
We've
got
to
come
out
and
make
contact.
What's
the
payoff?
When
you
touch
the
living
moment,
the
living
moment
reveals
its
nature,
and
this
knowingness
that
I
love
is
restored
to
its
proper
place.
As
a
FIVE
takes
that
risk,
comes
out
of
hiding
and
starts
to
make
contact,
[that
contact]
begins
to
restore
the
real
knowing,
giving
birth
to
the
virtue
of
the
FIVE,
which
I
call
non-attachment.
(It's
actually
not
"detachment,"
which
means
cutting
off,
the
schizoid
state
we
experience
in
the
middle
of
our
compulsion.)
Non-‐attachment
happens
when
you
are
in
touch
with
the
eternity
of
consciousness,
of
the
divine
Presence,
when
it's
here
illuminating
things
for
you
and
you
become
profoundly
aware
of
how
fleeting
everything
is.
That
non-‐attachment
actually
becomes
a
liberation
of
the
heart.
You're
not
clinging
to
anything
nor
avoiding
anything;
you're
holding
the
world
just
as
it
is
and
in
love
with
it.
That's
non-‐attachment.
It's
a
clean-‐heartedness.
[1]
Thus
healthy
FIVES
are
often
great
counselors,
advisors,
and
even
able
to
be
calmly
critical
of
themselves.
They
can
often
be
objective
when
the
rest
of
us
can't.
References:
[1]
Russ
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
as
a
Tool
for
Your
Spiritual
Journey
(CAC:
2009),
disc
5
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download).
Adapted
from
Richard
Rohr
and
Andreas
Ebert,
The
Enneagram:
A
Christian
Perspective
(The
Crossroad
Publishing
Company:
2001),
115.
SIXes
have
chosen
an
entirely
defensive
posture
against
their
primal
knowing,
which
was
true
and
perfect
Presence.
Russ
Hudson
calls
it
"the
quality
of
awakeness
in
which
you
can
feel
very
directly
this
Presence
all
around
you
and
within
you
that
gives
you
an
unshakable
courage
to
take
your
place
and
walk
your
walk
in
the
world."
[1]
When
SIXes
lose
the
sense
of
resting
in
the
full
presence
of
God,
instead
of
trustfully
being
held
by
Being
they
insist
on
forcing
the
issue.
"I
will
assure
it,
I
will
prove
it,
and
I
will
maintain
it,"
they
say.
They
once
held
an
image
of
an
utterly
reconciled
and
peaceful
world,
a
safe
and
secure
universe;
yet
instead
of
trusting
it
from
Another,
they
try
to
manufacture
it
themselves
by
laws,
authority,
and
structures
of
certitude
(conservative
religion,
patriotic
militarism,
highly
conceptual
theories).
Thus
they
have
an
ambivalent
love/hate
relationship
with
all
authority.
Hudson
explains
that
when
SIXes
lose
presence,
their
passion
or
root
sin
of
fear
or
anxiety
begins
to
grow
and
their
awakeness
shifts
to
vigilance,
then
to
watchfulness,
hyper-‐vigilance,
suspicions,
and
finally
paranoia.
"Their
anxiety
is
awakeness
without
presence,
[just
as]
fear
is
excitement
without
breathing,"
Hudson
says.
He
recommends
breathing
with
the
fear
and
anxiety,
being
with
it
as
a
signal
of
your
own
disconnection
from
the
Presence.
[2]
As
in
all
the
head
types,
a
mental
fixation
feeds
the
passion
and
vice
versa.
A
SIX
may
mentally
decide
that
a
certain
look
means
their
spouse
wants
a
divorce.
Hudson
says,
"Thinking
that
way
keeps
the
anxiety
going.
To
your
nervous
system,
it's
as
if
those
things
are
actually
happening.
When
you're
a
SIX,
your
life
could
be
pretty
good,
but
you're
telling
yourself
all
the
ways
it
could
fall
apart,
so
it
feels
like
it's
falling
apart.
.
.
.
SIXes
get
the
sense
that
keeping
myself
keyed
up
like
that
will
keep
me
on
top
of
things.
Fear
becomes
the
false
way
I
try
to
be
with
my
wakefulness.
I'm
like
a
guard,
trying
to
stay
on
duty,
making
sure
my
world
doesn't
fall
apart."
[3]
Hudson
calls
this
constant
feeling
of
angst
and
anxiety
"Pre-‐Traumatic
Stress
Syndrome."
[4]
The
pitfall
of
phobic
SIXes
is
cowardice;
the
pitfall
of
counterphobic
SIXes
is
taking
foolish
risks.
All
SIXes
both
overestimate
and
mistrust
authorities.
They
feel
weak,
which
can
lead
them
to
submit
in
a
sort
of
blind
obedience
(Germany
is
a
SIX
country).
But
it
also
leads
them
to
join
other
underdogs
to
find
strength
in
common.
The
strong
or
orthodox
group
(like
the
Infallible
Catholic
Church
or
Biblical
Inerrancy
Churches)
help
them
deny
and
overcome
their
personal
insecurity.
Counterphobic
SIXes
tend
to
be
panicky.
Before
their
fear-‐filled
fantasies
can
gain
power
over
them,
they
plunge
into
risky
undertakings
or
rebel
with
the
courage
of
despair.
The
root
sin
of
SIXes
also
has
a
positive
side.
SIXes
are
very
loyal,
cooperative,
reliable
team
players,
and
in
their
own
unique
way
usually
quite
humble.
They
are
the
work
force
of
the
world,
and
probably
the
most
common
number
by
far.
Their
friendships
are
marked
by
warmhearted
and
deep
feelings.
They
do
their
utmost
for
the
people
they
love.
As
the
SIX
starts
to
breathe
through
the
fear
and
anxiety,
Hudson
says,
"the
virtue
of
courage
arises.
It's
the
courage
to
show
up,
to
live
in
the
truth,
to
stop
hiding
in
our
ego
delusions
and
live
in
the
living
daylight
of
this
moment,
right
where
I
am
as
who
I
really
am
and
not
make
excuses."
The
SIX
must
hold
even
their
excuse
making
(i.e.,
their
chickening
out)
"in
compassion
and
see
it
and
understand
it,
in
the
sense
of
letting
it
be
illuminated.
.
.
.
Then
like
the
little
hobbit,
Frodo,
in
The
Lord
of
the
Rings,
they
will
take
their
stand
and
ask
'What
must
I
do?'
knowing
with
a
true
faith
that
nothing
bad
can
happen
ultimately
because
the
victory
is
already
won."
[5]
Redeemed
SIXes
have
found
their
true
inner
authority
which
allows
them
to
trust
in
the
benevolent
universe
and
perfect
Presence
they
once
knew.
Then
their
over-‐reliance
on
outer
authority
significantly
lessens,
but
it
is
always
a
struggle
for
them.
Love
and
be
patient
with
your
dear
SIX
friends.
It
is
not
easy
to
suffer
such
constant
self-‐doubt.
References:
[1]
Russ
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
as
a
Tool
for
Your
Spiritual
Journey
(CAC:
2009),
disc
5
(CD,
DVD,
MP3
download).
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
Ibid.
[4]
Russ
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
and
Grace:
9
Journeys
to
Divine
Presence
(CAC:
2012),
disc
7
(CD,
MP3
download).
[5]
Hudson,
The
Enneagram
as
a
Tool
for
Your
Spiritual
Journey,
disc
5.
Adapted
from
Richard
Rohr
and
Andreas
Ebert,
The
Enneagram:
A
Christian
Perspective
(The
Crossroad
Publishing
Company:
2001),
46-‐47,131,137.
SEVENs
once
knew
God/Reality
as
total
foundation
and
utterly
satisfying.
Russ
Hudson
explains
that
"SEVENs
originally
experienced
their
soul
as
a
place
of
absolute
freedom
with
no
walls,
no
limits,
and
abundant
resources,
all
of
which
gave
them
great
joy.
.
.
.
As
they
lost
connection
with
Presence,
they
lost
all
this
and
it
was
unbearably
painful."
[1]
The
ego
tries
to
fix
things
by
creating
a
personality
that
avoids
pain
and
insists
on
the
positive.
SEVENs
are
people
who
radiate
joy
and
optimism.
They
are
alive
to
the
precious
ingredients
in
every
moment;
they
can
feel
childlike
astonishment
and
experience
life
as
a
gift.
They
are
full
of
idealism
and
plans
for
the
future,
and
they
can
pass
on
their
enthusiasm
to
others.
They
don't
seem
"cerebral"
at
first
glance.
They
are
relaxed,
full
of
good
humor,
imaginative,
sunny,
and
playful-‐-‐until
one
day
they
notice
that
all
this
also
serves
to
protect
them
from
anxiety
and
pain.
In
the
course
of
their
development,
SEVENs
may
have
had
traumatic
experiences
which
they
were
not
equipped
to
process.
Their
response
was
twofold:
First
they
repressed
or
whitewashed
their
negative
or
painful
experiences.
Second,
they
went
into
their
heads
and
began
to
plan
their
lives
so
that
every
day
will
promise
as
much
fun
and
as
little
pain
as
possible.
SEVENs
have
so
internalized
their
optimism
that
they
have
problems
seeing
the
dark
and
difficult.
It's
hard
for
them
to
see
the
shadow
side
of
anything,
including
themselves.
Because
they
want
everything
to
be
beautiful
and
good,
other
aspects
of
reality
fade
out
of
view.
SEVENs
love
freedom.
They
want
to
leave
all
their
options
open
and
unconsciously
avoid
committing
themselves
too
deeply,
because
that
would
limit
their
options!
Besides,
if
you
totally
devote
yourself
to
someone
or
something,
your
own
limits
and
the
limits
of
others
might
become
visible-‐-‐
and
that
would
be
too
painful.
The
passion
or
root
sin
of
the
SEVEN
is
gluttony.
Their
motto
is
"More
is
always
better."
Mostly
they
are
gluttonous
for
fun,
joy,
and
options.
They
love
thinking
about
plans,
trips,
adventures,
and
projects.
SEVENs
are
very
idealistic.
They
know
the
fulfillment
of
their
soul
has
something
to
do
with
worthwhile
service
to
the
world.
But
they
distract
themselves
by
trying
not
to
miss
out
on
any
possibilities,
and
disconnected
from
God's
guidance,
they
have
a
hard
time
landing
anywhere.
[2]
Here
is
Russ
Hudson's
take
on
a
SEVEN's
journey:
All
these
ego
patterns
are
very
addictive.
A
SEVEN
is
addicted
to
thinking
about
everything
I'm
going
to
do.
The
more
I
do
that,
the
more
I
fall
into
the
passion
of
the
SEVEN,
which
is
gluttony.
The
further
away
from
Presence
I
am,
the
further
away
from
the
grace
of
God,
the
more
I
start
to
feel
no
abundance,
no
freedom,
no
fulfillment,
no
satisfaction.
So
my
ego
is
desperately
trying
to
find
it,
trying
to
get
the
experiences
that
I
think
will
fill
me
up
and
make
me
happy
again.
But
no
matter
how
much
I
try,
it
doesn't
work-‐-‐because
it's
not
in
the
content
of
experience
that
I'll
find
happiness,
but
in
the
quality
of
my
attention
and
presence
in
any
experience
I
have.
A
SEVEN
needs
to
recognize,
as
we
all
do,
that
everything
we
are
looking
for
is
right
here,
right
now,
if
we
are
just
still
and
open.
Usually
we're
going
to
feel
anxious
and
scared.
.
.
.
In
fact,
any
time
I'm
breaking
out
of
my
old
ego
identity,
I'm
going
to
be
scared.
(I
guarantee
you
all
nine
types
will
experience
fear.)
As
I
open
more
into
the
divine
Presence,
I'm
moving
into
the
unknown
and
I'm
relinquishing
the
strategy
that
I've
held
since
I
was
a
little
kid
to
be
secure
and
to
stay
safe.
But
as
I
stay
with
Presence,
the
virtue
of
the
SEVEN
starts
to
grow
in
me.
The
virtue
here
is
a
kind
of
joyful
sobriety
and
gratitude.
In
other
words,
I
need
nothing
but
this
moment.
I
feel
my
heart
filled,
and
I
know
the
freedom
is
here.
And
suddenly
I
bring
this
clear,
delicious
satisfaction
that
is
unshakable.
Every
moment
is
a
moment
for
gratitude,
whatever's
happening.
[3]
With
EIGHTs
we
return
to
the
domain
of
the
gut,
which
embraces
EIGHTs,
NINEs,
and
ONEs.
The
EIGHT's
primal
knowing
was
that
God/Reality
was
warmth,
food,
protection,
empathy,
relationship,
and
total
understanding
of
how
weak,
needy,
and
hungry
we
all
are.
Feeling
separate
from
such
a
nurturing
God
leaves
the
EIGHT
vulnerable
and
needy.
To
seemingly
"fix"
this
dilemma,
the
EIGHT's
ego
decides
to
hate,
reject,
deny,
and
project
that
neediness
everywhere
else-‐-‐so
they
don't
have
to
cry
over
it
inside
themselves.
"I
will
never
cry,"
they
say,
and
"I
will
protect
the
little
ones
from
crying."
They
decide
to
do
God's
work
themselves.
"I
will
partner
everybody
and
everything
and
take
away
this
horrible
aloneness,
this
unnecessary
sadness,
this
unjust
world.
Because
I
know
it
to
be
softer
and
kinder
than
it
appears."
And
they
do!
EIGHTs
do
a
good
job
of
hiding
their
vulnerability.
They
impress
us
as
strong
and
mighty;
they
are
capable
of
imparting
a
feeling
of
strength
to
others
as
well.
They
have
a
strong
sense
of
justice
and
truth.
They
instinctively
know
when
dishonesty
or
injustice
is
at
work.
EIGHTs
address
such
situations
openly
and
directly.
They
can
be
a
rock
of
reliability
for
others
and
develop
a
tremendous
sense
of
responsibility.
When
they
commit
themselves
to
a
cause,
they
can
bring
enormous
energies
to
bear
on
it.
Mother
Teresa
was
an
eight,
but
so
redeemed
that
she
appeared
to
the
world
to
be
a
TWO,
exactly
as
the
Enneagram
predicts.
Early
on,
EIGHTs
got
the
impression
that
the
world
punishes
soft
tendencies.
They
may
have
experienced
being
repressed
or
pushed
around
as
children.
Perhaps
they
could
trust
no
one
but
themselves.
Some
EIGHTs
also
report
that
their
parents
rewarded
strength.
EIGHTs
have
developed
the
feeling
that
the
strong
rule
the
world
and
the
weak
have
drawn
the
short
straw.
For
this
reason
they
have
decided
not
to
be
good,
not
to
conform,
but
to
develop
strength,
to
resist,
to
break
the
rules,
and
to
order
others
around
rather
than
to
let
themselves
be
ordered.
EIGHTs
avoid
appearing
helpless,
weak,
or
subordinate.
Fortunately,
EIGHTs
like
to
take
the
side
of
the
weak.
Their
passion
for
justice
and
truth
often
leads
them
to
side
with
the
oppressed
and
defenseless.
This
is
because
they
unconsciously
know
that
within
their
own
innermost
self-‐-‐behind
a
façade
of
hardness,
invulnerability,
curses,
or
even
brutality-‐-‐there's
a
vulnerable
little
boy
or
a
little
girl
(which
they
reveal
to
very
few
people).
When
you're
really
poor,
helpless,
and
weak,
the
EIGHT's
protective
instinct
is
aroused,
and
they
will
do
anything
to
assist
you.
But
as
soon
as
you
express
in
any
way
that
you
have
your
own
power,
then
the
EIGHT
will
prove
that
they
have
more
power.
The
passion
or
root
sin
of
the
EIGHT
is
called
lust.
Russ
Hudson
interprets
this
as
an
addiction
to
intensity
that
arises
from
the
loss
of
their
original
connection
with
God.
Losing
the
divine
Presence
that
felt
like
their
life,
strength,
energy,
and
protection
makes
EIGHTs
feel
vulnerable,
deflated,
and
dead.
The
ego
tries
to
force
life
into
feeling
real
and
alive
again.
But
first
EIGHTs
must
take
off
the
armor
of
toughness
they've
worn
to
protect
their
vulnerability,
because
real
aliveness
means
letting
our
heart
be
affected
again.
[1]
Hudson
says,
"Virtue
is
what's
cultivated
in
a
person
who
has
continually
oriented
his
or
her
heart
toward
the
Truth.
The
more
an
EIGHT
opens
to
that
grace,
being
willing
to
be
affected,
the
more
the
virtue
starts
to
manifest.
.
.
.
The
virtue
of
the
EIGHT
is
[traditionally
called]
innocence.
We
call
it
mercy.
To
be
powerful,
strong,
and
merciful,
like
a
true
king,
is
the
journey
an
EIGHT
is
here
to
take.
.
.
.
It
will
always
be
about
remembering
where
the
real
strength
comes
from,
restoring
the
heart,
the
tenderness
.
.
.
and
letting
this
mercy
be
cultivated
in
you."
[2]
There
is
also
a
good
passion,
a
robust
lust
for
life,
that
often
shows
itself
in
healthy
EIGHTS.
Who
would
not
love
that?
Even
if
it
wears
you
out.
NINEs
once
knew
that
reality
was
all
about
love,
all
connected,
operative,
and
effective.
They
knew
a
kind
of
optimism
and
motivation
that
all
could
be
worked
out
and
fixed
because
God
is
Love.
Love
changes
everything;
love
resolves
everything.
Russ
Hudson
emphasizes
that
the
core
of
the
NINE
is
about
being
itself.
The
primal
knowing
of
the
NINE
is
that
"I
am.
I
am
a
manifestation
of
God.
.
.
.
I
feel
that
divine
Presence
and
how
that
divine
Presence
is
producing
this
life.
It's
all
some
unfathomable
huge
unity
right
now.
.
.
.
I
feel
so
harmoniously
related
to
everything
that
exists.
We're
all
manifesting
out
of
this
Oneness,
this
divine
Presence.
.
.
.
This
is
what
NINEs
are
here
to
teach
and
remind
the
rest
of
us."
[1]
Hudson
explains
that
the
NINE's
passion
or
root
sin-‐-‐sloth-‐-‐emerges
from
the
loss
of
this
oneness.
The
NINE
feels,
"I
don't
exist,
I
don't
matter,
I'm
nothing,
I'm
not
real.
I'm
peripheral.
I'm
disconnected
from
everything.
I'm
a
little
insignificant
nothing.
(All
egos
feel
that
on
some
level.)"
[2]
Sloth
in
NINEs
is
really
the
lack
of
focused
energy.
NINEs
don't
put
out
any
energy
that
lets
you
get
a
handle
on
them.
It's
the
attitude
of
checking
out,
because
at
the
center
of
the
gut
triad,
NINEs
feel
life
is
just
too
much.
NINEs
seldom
take
initiative
in
relationships
or
in
projects.
They
need
a
fire
lit
under
them.
They
need
to
connect
with
an
institution
or
structure
or
have
someone
like
a
spouse
or
a
child
depending
on
them.
Otherwise
they'll
just
float
and
get
pulled
in
all
different
directions
because
they
don't
know
what
their
priorities
really
are.
NINEs
are
naturally
humble.
They
allow
themselves
to
be
overlooked.
They
like
to
stay
in
the
background
and
cultivate
the
self-‐image
of
not
being
anything
special.
They
consider
themselves
simple
and
uncomplicated
and
present
themselves
accordingly.
NINEs
are
peacemakers.
They
avoid
conflicts.
Their
gift
of
accepting
others
without
prejudice
makes
people
feel
understood
and
accepted.
NINEs
can
be
unbiased
arbitrators
because
they
can
see
and
appreciate
the
positive
aspects
of
both
sides.
Their
sense
of
fairness
may
make
them
committed
fighters
for
peace
and
justice.
They
express
harsh
truths
so
calmly
and
matter-‐of-‐factly
that
it's
easy
for
others
to
hear
these
truths.
In
the
presence
of
a
NINE
many
people
find
it
easy
to
come
to
rest
themselves.
NINEs
somehow
harmonize
the
energy
in
a
room.
The
life
task
of
NINEs
consists
in
discovering
and
developing
their
feelings
of
self-‐worth
and
their
own
inner
focus
and
drive.
They
find
their
way
to
real
love
when
they
have
found
their
way
back
to
their
own
center.
Then
the
virtue
of
the
NINE
emerges
which
is,
surprisingly,
decisive
action.
At
first
NINEs
waiver
and
hesitate,
putting
off
everything.
But
when
they
reach
a
decision,
it
happens
in
a
moment
of
absolute
clarity.
They
know
in
a
flash
what's
involved,
and
they
will
do
it,
often
quite
well-‐-‐and
look
anything
but
lazy
or
slothful.