Take the test and imagine what Trump would answer if he were being honest.

Frank


Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz
Santa Fe, NM 87505

wimber...@gmail.com     wimbe...@cal.berkeley.edu
Phone:  (505) 995-8715      Cell:  (505) 670-9918


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of glen ?
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2017 3:51 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Globalism in the age of populism? .. & Open Source Software


Right, it's fine for us to be talking about ambiguous concepts... in fact, I'd 
argue those are the things that need the most discussion.  Just for context, 
since I'm still waiting for my hepatocyte culture simulation to finish, I took 
this test:

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/beautiful-minds/23-signs-youe28099re-secretly-a-narcissist-masquerading-as-a-sensitive-introvert/

I got a 67 ... of course, that's probably biased since I'm taking the test in 
the context of this conversation.  But what's amazing to me is my ability to 
doubt myself while remaining confident in my doubt of other things.  The best 
question was:

  "___ I tend to feel humiliated when criticized."

This reminds me of the reappropriation of negative labels.  I can't help but 
wonder what mechanisms (deeply) insecure people have developed to handle 
negative circumstances.  And that reminds me of this article, which I thought 
was fantastic:

  An open letter to Milo Yiannopoulos
  http://www.dailycal.org/2017/01/17/open-letter-milo-yiannopoulos/

I think most people are hurt by criticism of any kind.  But what matters is not 
that you're hurt by it.  What matters is how you _respond_.  And how you 
respond also happens to be how we diagnose personality disorders.  It seems 
less about how the incoming information impinges on you and much more about how 
you respond, what your rearing taught you to do.


On 01/27/2017 02:20 PM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> Well, this isn't physics or math so any assertion is ambiguous, complicated 
> and uncertain. But...Introversion is often caused by grandiose or 
> exhibitionistic impulses.  Once I saw a TV interview in which Barbra 
> Streisand claimed to be a shy introvert.  (That's the correct spelling of her 
> name). To the extent that I understand it, and very oversimplified, 
> Narcissistic Personality Disorder is caused by failure of the parents to 
> validate a child's authentic self.  For instance, imagine a three year-old's 
> mother says, "He's a ladies' man like his daddy".  First, he's not a man and 
> the only lady he cares about is his mommy.  He feels lonely, empty, and much 
> dissonance between what he is and what his parent(s) say(s) he is.
> 
> Disclaimer: I read a handful of books on this and related topics.  I took one 
> course at the Pittsburgh Psychoanalytic Institute on "Psychoanalysis and 
> Literature".  I had many conversations with residents, psychiatrists, and 
> psychoanalysts when I worked in the Research Center in Child Psychiatry at 
> the University of Pittsburgh.  This is far from being educated in the field.

--
☣ glen

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