“First Nations understood personalities 3,000 years before the first European documentation in 400BC”
This statement seemed to grip the attention of a First Nations group of workshop participants. As part of the Personality Dimensions® introduction and history, I show how the First Nation’s Medicine Wheel described four types of people very similar to the styles described by Personality Dimensions®. Including this connection at the beginning of the workshop helped the participants quickly understand and remember the four colour styles. Within minutes the group was “talking in colour” as if it were second nature.
I made it clear to the group that I am not a First Nations descendant, nor have any authority regarding First Nation’s teaching. I explained that I wanted to show how First Nations were advanced in the understanding of personality over modern discoveries.
Here’s how I made the connection…
The Four Villages
Instead of introducing Personality Dimensions® through the Party Game exercise that uses the four Poster Cards, I used summaries of the four villages (personalities) from the First Nation’s Medicine Wheel. Here are the four Village Posters:
I asked the group to stand by the Village Poster that they relate to the most or find most interesting. After participants explained their attraction to each poster I asked them to take the poster from the wall revealing the associated Personality Dimensions® Poster Card, then I introduce each of the four personality preferences.
History
As a transition to the temperament history slide, I share the observation that First Nations observed four primary types of people in their Medicine Wheels 3,000 years before Hippocrates.
Circle of Self
I adapted the Circle of Self activity to create a tent card using Medicine Wheels to create pie-chart representations of the participant’s Personality Dimensions® Scores. This provided an on-going connection between their Personality Dimensions® results and the Medicine Wheel.
Personality Mastery
One of the Medicine Wheel’s teachings that I value very highly is the importance of being aware of all the Cardinal Directions (personality styles) and being able to move in and out of these directions when needed for the greater good of the community. In relating this to Personality Dimensions®, I used the term “Personality Mastery.” A fellow facilitator, trained in Shamanic Ways, believes that when a person possesses Personality Mastery they become like an Elder in their community.
The group seemed to embrace personality styles very easily by visioning the four cardinal directions in the Medicine Wheel. The quest for Personality Mastery also helped to avoid “colour bashing” since it was part of their culture to respect all the personalities (villages).
Conclusion
If used respectfully I think the Medicine Wheel is a natural interface for Personality Dimensions® in First Nations communities. Even when I use the Medicine Wheel story with non-First Nations groups, giving it proper respect, I find it makes a tangible connection to the four Personality Dimensions® styles, something very helpful for the kinaesthetic learners in my workshops.
By: Terry Maynard
Terry has over 20 years of experience in delivering personality styles workshops in Corporate Training, Human Resources, and Youth Leadership settings. Through hard work, a relentless drive to create, implement and improve effective techniques, Terry uses his unique capabilities in learning systems and understanding of people to harness the “unlimited worth” in people. Get in touch with Terry through his website at www.unlimitedworth.com.
6 Responses
What a great way to adapt PD to a target audience! Thanks for sharing.
This is wonderful!!!! Thanks for sharing!!GailSent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
Excellent ideas here, Terry. I am most impressed! Keep up the great work.
As always Terry very insightful – and very respectful of First Nations Teachings. I have dabbled with this correlation before, but you have nailed it! Well done my friend – love what you do!
Thanks for the complements. Got to give credit to Joseph McQuabie, Spiritual Leader of Ojibwa Perry Sound Ontario for the initial story, Julia Morch, Taught in Shamanic Ways, for teaching me about the Medicine Wheel, and Denise Hughes of Career Life Skills for freedom to be creative.
I love this enriching insight into Personality Dimensions from the perspective of the First Nations. Great work and thanks for sharing, Terry.
Emil Boychuk
Guidance Counsellor/
Occasional Teacher
mobile: 416-476-8790
Best email: emil.boychuk@gmail.com
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