Enneagrams

Dr. Purushothaman
September 12, 2015

What if humans had spent many centuries contemplating on the trends of motivation which sit outside the awareness of individuals and support the choices they make? The Enneagram is a system with profound origins which has been built and evolved through several years and several frameworks. It is more than just an exercise in personality typing: it is actually a method of identifying center patterns of behavior and motivation in order for you to make modifications and alterations that work.

So have you ever coached someone who seemed to be at least 2 entirely different persons? The Enneagram provides a distinctive context on how individuals advance on to varied types of personalities under dissimilar circumstances. It is a dynamic paradigm which represents the intricacies we all have felt and experienced when we relate to ourselves and to others.

If you have ever coached both Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde-or if you have ever marveled, "was that truly me"? -then you would be very curious about the paradigm provided by the Enneagram. As a coach, you foster and promote change in your clients. And some of those changes or modifications adhere but some of them are difficult to maintain.

Individuals could stick to similar trends of attitude and behavior for varying reasons. Enneagram is a way in thinking about which changes work and why the design of change that worked for one client could have varying effect or outcome for another client in just about a similar condition. The better your tools and devices for recognizing the motivations which are driving attitude and behavior, the better your chance or opportunity of generating favorable and sustainable change.

Learning and understanding about the Enneagram possesses the similar advantages as other learning which takes you deeper into the human mode. It lets you accept some of your own inadvertent choices and to dig deeper more regarding the implication you are having on other people. For some individuals, the Enneagram even has spiritual elements.

But for coaches, there are more particular reasons to add this system to the tools and contexts they provide to their clients. Coaches who learn and understand the Enneagram would be able to: 1. Change behaviors and motivation concurrently. 2. Retain a portrait of the total person whilst affecting certain behaviors and attitudes.

3. Reveal the advantages of certain attitudes of personalities for a person; no one really changes a behavior or characteristic except they know they could resume to gain similar benefits in another method. Yet maybe, most importantly, the Enneagram acknowledges that our greatest strength might also become our zone of biggest vulnerability (and likewise, that our problems or difficulties might hold the key to new opportunities).

It enables us to be cognizant that we have to live with all of our qualities and characteristics. We just can't merely take off qualities; we should reframe them in order to let them work in our favor. Utilizing the Enneagram aids coaches and also their clients to be more open minded and forgiving of a variety of characteristics and to detach the points at which change is possible and favorable.
About the Author

The author of this article, Amy Twain, is a Self Improvement Coach who has been successfully coaching and guiding clients for many years. Amy recently published a new home study course on how to boost your Self Esteem. Click here to get more info about her Quick-Action Plan for A More Confident You.

Article Source: http://goarticles.com/article/The-Enneagram-Of-Personality-In-Coaching/2903389/

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