The
Idealist Portrait
All Idealists
(NFs) share the following core characteristics:
- Idealists
are enthusiastic, they trust their intuition, yearn for romance, seek their
true self, prize meaningful relationships, and dream of attaining wisdom.
- Idealists
pride themselves on being loving, kindhearted, and authentic.
- Idealists
tend to be giving, trusting, spiritual, and they are focused on personal journeys
and human potentials.
- Idealists
make intense mates, nurturing parents, and inspirational leaders.
Idealists,
as a temperament, are passionately concerned with personal growth and development.
Idealists strive to discover who they are and how they can become their best
possible self--always this quest for self-knowledge and self-improvement drives
their imagination. And they want to help others make the journey. Idealists
are naturally drawn to working with people, and whether in education or counseling,
in social services or personnel work, in journalism or the ministry, they are
gifted at helping others find their way in life, often inspiring them to grow
as individuals and to fulfill their potentials.
Idealists are sure
that friendly cooperation is the best way for people to achieve their goals.
Conflict and confrontation upset them because they seem to put up angry barriers
betrween people. Idealists dream of creating harmonious, even caring personal
relations, and they have a unique talent for helping people get along with each
other and work together for the good of all. Such interpersonal harmony might
be a romantic ideal, but then Idealists are incurable romantics who prefer to
focus on what might be, rather than what is. The real, practical world is only
a starting place for Idealists; they believe that life is filled with possibilities
waiting to be realized, rich with meanings calling out to be understood. This
idea of a mystical or spiritual dimension to life, the "not visible" or the
"not yet" that can only be known through intuition or by a leap of faith, is
far more important to Idealists than the world of material things.
Highly ethical
in their actions, Idealists hold themselves to a strict standard of personal
integrity. They must be true to themselves and to others, and they can be quite
hard on themselves when they are dishonest, or when they are false or insincere.
More often, however, Idealists are the very soul of kindness. Particularly in
their personal relationships, Idealists are without question filled with love
and good will. They believe in giving of themselves to help others; they cherish
a few warm, sensitive friendships; they strive for a special rapport with their
children; and in marriage they wish to find a "soulmate," someone with whom
they can bond emotionally and spiritually, sharing their deepest feelings and
their complex inner worlds.
Idealists are rare,
making up no more than 8 to 10 percent of the population. But their ability
to inspire people with their enthusiasm and their idealism has given them influence
far beyond their numbers.
The
four types of Idealists are:
Healers | Counselors
| Champions | Teachers
Excerpted
from Please Understand Me II by David Keirsey Copyrighted © 1998-2001,
all rights reserved
To see which of the four Idealist Types
you have tested as and to read the description of this Type, take the steps
below to purchase your personalized Keirsey Report:
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