Twister—The Game Not the Movie

Bruce Anderson
I find it interesting watching students of the enneagram trying to fit the structures of other psychological disciplines on the nine points of the enneagram. It reminds me of the children’s game of Twister™. In this game, you have a large floor mat made of durable plastic with rows of large red, yellow and blue dots, and a board with an arrow that spins. With a spin, the player is, perchance, instructed to place his right foot on a yellow dot, his left foot on a blue dot, right h...
Subscribe today (returning users login) to access more of this article as well as the entire Enneagram Monthly archive.
Subscribe here.