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nativecoinc | 2 years ago
Some things aren’t just taken out of thin air. Part of being a “social creature” is that you pick up on what other people think of you by observing how they talk about other people that you have something in common with. And that doesn’t have to be something wishy-washy like “being boring”; it could be very concrete, objective things, like being X or having Y. Then you go, huh, that’s me as well. And then you listen to them say that oh, people who are X, Y, and Z are A and B. And that’s you as well.
But no (someone says), they’re wrong: it’s just their opinion. It’s entirely subjective and partial.
... But don’t you see? That’s what being a social creature is—being at the whims of the opinion of others. How can you possibly claim that Humans Are Social Creatures, and then blame the person who is affected by What Others Think of Them?
anonymouskimmer|2 years ago
I didn't presume you did. And honestly it may not be worth your time learning about it. Fortunately the three instincts aren't a part of the enneagram proper, just another temperament system frequently used with the enneagram of personality to fill in an orthogonal hole.
> Part of being a “social creature” is that you pick up on what other people think of you by observing how they talk about other people that you have something in common with.
One thing I have noticed is that quite often people will badmouth a type of person, but when it's pointed out that so-and-so is also that type of person, they'll immediately say that so-and-so isn't and cite a bunch of 'redeeming' qualities. Socially inclined people seem to see nuance in those close to them that they don't see in those further away from them.
> Part of being a “social creature” is that you pick up on what other people think of you by observing how they talk about other people that you have something in common with.
Social is my blind spot. I don't, and really can't. I have never been able to answer questions that ask what other people think of me, at least not without days of thought about it. And even then I'm just guessing somewhat randomly.
Russ Hudson posits three "zones" of the social instinct, "reading people, creating connections, & contribution". The only one I have any real facility with is "contribution".
What he says about having a social blindspot:
> SO blind spot often manifests as an exaggerated self-consciousness. It's hard to relax & be w. people. We are afraid of making mistakes--"faux pas." It feels easier to simply avoid human contact than to risk being humiliated. But then we do not get practice or develop skills.
> We may justify this by thinking people are boring, shallow, clueless, etc. But w. awareness, we see these as defenses against our fears about ourselves. Again, the voices are NOT telling the truth. We discover we connect ABOUT something interesting/important to us. We share.
So at least part of the bad feedback you're getting is probably people projecting their own fears defensively.
> How can you possibly claim that Humans Are Social Creatures, and then blame the person who is affected by What Others Think of Them?
Personally I've long argued against humans as Social Creatures. Many of us are, but I believe large fractions of us are closer to presocial or solitary-but-social creatures (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociality ).
There's not blame here. Merely recognition of sometimes maladaptive psychological quirks. Our psychologies exist for very good reasons, but we are hardly universal beings. Sometimes our minds use the wrong inference tool for the job.