First see “How Your Mind Makes Decisions”
Introverted Feeling (or what we’ve nicknamed Authenticity) is the part of us that asks, “Does this feel right to me?” When we need to make a decision that is true and honest to who we are, it’s Authenticity that guides us. When you understand how an action or word will impact the subjective human experience or when you feel conviction, you’re using Authenticity as decision-making criteria.
Example:
There is a famous story in the Hebrew Scriptures of the Bible where three young gentlemen are faced with either giving worship to a god they believe is false (according to the religion and culture of their youth), or dying in a fire. Their conscience does not allow them to do even a single act of worship and so they are thrown into a huge furnace. In the story, an angel is said to protect them from death as reward for their loyalty.
The magical elements of this story aside, the willingness to die for a conviction or belief is at the heart of Authenticity.
Authenticity-driven people are far more driven by personal conviction than any other consideration. In fact, it is sometimes difficult to motivate an Authenticity person unless they are personally touched or inspired. Once committed, however, they are a powerhouse and oftentimes unstoppable.
This often takes them in idealistic directions, believing something to be possible because they first felt it on the inside. Outside considerations are not nearly as interesting or compelling as internal feelings, and so they are often strangers – or even blind – to metrics. Something can be done because they believe it can, and others will stand in disbelief as an Authenticity person moves mountains to accomplish a vision.
At best, Authenticity is a true inspiration to others, congruent with all of their inner voices and aligned toward a mission.
At their worst, Authenticity people are fickle, unable to tell the difference between something feeling ‘wrong’ or it simply feeling ‘bad’. Unable to deal with any internal negativity, Authenticity can become impossible to please and project all their internal discomfort onto friends and family.
In order to make the best decisions, Authenticity people should remember a couple of things. First, believing in yourself and in the power of convictions is your gift, but it can easily turn ugly if idealism is all you can accept. The best way to keep you from entering an unhappy world of disappointment is to keep a strong grip on reality. Ask yourself what is actually happening, not simply what you would like to be happening. A good exercise is to remove the word “should” from your vocabulary and your internal dialog, replacing it with the word “is.”
Be careful not to mistake convicted for right. There are times when you may believe something to the core of your being and still be wonderfully and fabulously wrong. Keep an open mind and stay observant. You can make amazing things happen as long as you don’t lose your grip on reality.
Authenticity people tend to have a blind spot in Effectiveness.
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40 comments
Hi Leanne, totally with you on this one. I also read the Artist Way – I remember her suggesting to make a list of things and places I wanted to do and visit. I did that as part of my Artist Dates (on my own or with my daughter) during a holiday in the Pyrenees and I treasure that month as wonderful. The ‘sensory exposure’ that I experienced helped me 1)to discover my passions 2)to be courageous to be true to myself. And yes… stuff self-doubt! But what did i do? Put Artist Dates away!! And back to “boring” routines…. Well .. enough!! I need Artist Dates.. to spice my life and to ground myself. Without exploration and “adventure” I get stuck into boredom and I totally lose my purpose and spark in life.
Yes, the biggest regrets in my life have resulted from allowing others to “chip away at my convictions”. Your example is right on – not priming because it’s just a rental would absolutely make my head explode!
Hi and thank you so much for your work in Personality Hacker! I listen to you two regularly on my hour+ commute to and from work and have learned a whole lot! My daughter is onto you guys too now.;-)
I do have a request. I realize that both of you come from what sounds like oppressive “Christian” homes and that saddens me. I do feel that maybe you have thrown the baby out with the bathwater, though, but that is another conversation. My request is that probably many of your listeners do embrace Christianity (hopefully not the way you have experienced), and when you call Biblical stories “magical” or “mythical,” it’s a bit off-putting. Rather than assigning value judgments to them like that, can you respect the fact that there are people who believe these stories to be true? I think your purpose is not to debunk Christianity, or at least I hope that’s not your purpose, and therefore perhaps you could guard against judging. It’s distracting to your message. Thanks for considering my request!
I don’t come from a christian or strict background by the way
‘Authenticity’ rings a loud bell. With it the eyeopener : so to many others this is not as important? And it will not be important in the future? Or : the importance of this is not without question, but subjective? And : how can we meet in the end when we’re different in this? Abandon all hope.
:-) (self-mockery)