lie's Johari Window

The Johari Window was invented by Joseph Luft and Harrington Ingham in the 1950s as a model for mapping personality awareness. By describing yourself from a fixed list of adjectives, then asking your friends and colleagues to describe you from the same list, a grid of overlap and difference can be built up.

You are reading this page because lie wants to know how you'd describe him or her - pick the five or six words from the list below that you think describe lie the best. (You can set up your own Johari Window afterwards, if you like.)

Warning: If you're hacking URLs, this might not be the lie you know, it could just be someone else who's used the name. Ask your lie if this is their Johari Window.

ableacceptingadaptableboldbrave
calmcaringcheerfulclevercomplex
confidentdependabledignifiedenergeticextroverted
friendlygivinghappyhelpfulidealistic
independentingeniousintelligentintrovertedkind
knowledgeablelogicallovingmaturemodest
nervousobservantorganisedpatientpowerful
proudquietreflectiverelaxedreligious
responsivesearchingself-assertiveself-conscioussensible
sentimentalshysillyspontaneoussympathetic
tensetrustworthywarmwisewitty

Enter a name so that lie and other readers will know what you thought (or just use "anonymous" if you'd rather). Note that your words and name will be visible to other people who reply to lie's window.

Name:

(Or you can just view their Window if you've done this before.)

The Interactive Johari Window was installed and grouted by Kevan, on the 11th of February 2006.
Questions? Check the FAQ.
If you can take criticism, there's also a darker Nohari Window.