Monday, May 17, 2004

Storyboarding to fit your personality type


Yesterday, I had a long conversation with a friend who had, years ago, taken
a three day workshop on Myers-Briggs personality types. She said this course
revolutionized her life because understanding her personality type and that
of her children make it so much easier to understand them and communicate
with them. Last week, I went to do a little newspaper article on another
personality type paradigm called DISC, which isn't quite so complex as
Myers-Briggs, and parallels another personality typing course I took years
ago in a Sunday school class that talked about Choleric, Sanguine,
Phlegmatic and Melancholic personality types.

Many of us have come across these paradigms, or others, perhaps based on
colors or different hats. How do these relate to storyboarding?

I need to storyboard my life because I am an ENFP---an Extroverted,
iNtuitive, Feeling and Perceiving type according to Myers-Briggs, an I,
according to DISC and a Sanguine according to the classical personality type
model.

I need to plan and impose some discipline on my spontaneous, dreamy,
fun-loving personality or I'd never get a lick of work done. I also have to
trick my subconscious into thinking that certain things like cleaning the
birdcage or dusting are fun-filled escapades or I'll procrastinate forever.

I realized recently though that the storyboard was working too well. I was
being really disciplined. I was chained to my computer. I was following my
plan. But, I was starting to feel lonely and depressed and, well, sick and
tired of discipline and order. So, I threw off the traces and felt like an
arrow shooting out of a tightened bow. I had to stop and let myself drift
and play and be around people and let things happen in unexpected and
surprising ways because that's my nature and it's okay to be that way and if
I don't allow myself to express that side of my nature I will shrivel up and
die inside.

But, I'm confident that I can use the storyboard to get myself back on track
so that I can harness all the energy created by allowing myself to live for
a season in what suits my personality the best.

For those of you who are already tightly focused and disciplined, who find
the idea of letting go, being spontaneous and dreaming foreign, difficult,
and even a little scary, storyboarding can help you develop that side of
your nature, help you get out of your comfort zone and lean how to smell the
roses and enjoy life.

You can use the good habits you already have in planning to plan some down
time, some fun time, some time to cultivate some dreams and vision.

The point is this: you can adjust your storyboard to suit your personality,
to work with your strengths and to give you the motivation to work on habits
that correct your weaknesses.

Happy storyboarding,

Deborah

1 Comments:

At June 4, 2004 at 10:44 PM, Blogger Donna J. Shepherd said...

Years ago, I heard Marita Littauer (sp?) speak on the four personality types. Turns out my husband and I are polar opposites. Of course I already knew that.

I can see where an analysis of personality would help with the storyboarding. A choleric person would be more apt to set goals and determine to reaching them, but melancholic would be stressed by them. The sanguine would probably never get around to setting them to begin with. lol!

Donna

 

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