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Take Care of Your Type
Take Care of Your Type: An Enneagram Guide to Self-Care | Christina S. Wilcox
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Discover the self-care tips specifically designed for your Enneagram type with this simple yet illuminating guide from popular Enneagram expert Christina S. Wilcox. Many of us have used the Enneagram of Personality to understand ourselves on a profoundly intimate level. But despite what our Enneagram type reveals, it’s not always easy to know the best ways to take care of ourselves according to our unique personalities. In Take Care of Your Type, Enneagram expert and social media sensation Christina S. Wilcox uses her knowledge of the Enneagram to illuminate how each of the nine Enneagram types can practice better self-care. Answering questions ranging from “What is the best morning routine for my type?” and “What boundaries are important to set based on my individual personality traits?” this handy guide filled with beautiful color illustrations will help you recenter and reconnect with yourself amid the stress of daily life and will leave you feeling happier and healthier in mind, body, and spirit.
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normasue
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I picked up this book knowing nothing about enneagram but curious about the idea of personalized self care. It has opened a whole new world of thought, especially since the sections I felt I most strongly reacted to, both emotionally and intellectually, were not in the chapter directed to my type. Reading the book prompted me to take the test and the results were unexpected.

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normasue
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In this context I know she's talking about worthiness as in worth or value, but it struck me as an interesting statement because I'm so accustomed to thinking of worthiness as a construct resultant from meeting some basic qualifications. Value is always measured on some sort of scale. What is the scale to measure the value or worth of a person? What is the etymological relationship between worth and worthy if they both come from the same root?