It also reminds me of a Enneagram retreat I heard about once, where the leader divided the group into their types. All the groups did fine: one set was busily following the rules, the next were helping each other, the third were all reading up to understand—except the one group that were all miserable because they all wanted to be special, not just like everyone else in the group. . . .
It also reminds me of a Enneagram retreat I heard about once, where the leader divided the group into their types. All the groups did fine: one set was busily following the rules, the next were helping each other, the third were all reading up to understand—except the one group that were all miserable because they all wanted to be special, not just like everyone else in the group. . . .