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 can get your own Johari Window, or contribute to ripper24's.
| Known to Self |
Not Known to Self | |
| Known to Others | Arenacaringtrustworthy | Blind Spotacceptingextroverted giving mature patient shy spontaneous witty |
| Not Known to Others | Façadecomplexknowledgeable quiet | Unknownable adaptable bold brave calm cheerful clever confident dependable dignified energetic friendly happy helpful idealistic independent ingenious intelligent introverted kind logical loving modest nervous observant organised powerful proud reflective relaxed religious responsive searching self-assertive self-conscious sensible sentimental silly sympathetic tense warm wise |
(Hover over a word to see how many people chose it.) | ||
100% of people think that ripper24 is giving
100% of people agree that ripper24 is trustworthy
able (0%) accepting (50%) adaptable (0%) bold (0%) brave (0%) calm (0%) caring (50%) cheerful (0%) clever (0%) complex (0%) confident (0%) dependable (0%) dignified (0%) energetic (0%) extroverted (50%) friendly (0%) giving (100%) happy (0%) helpful (0%) idealistic (0%) independent (0%) ingenious (0%) intelligent (0%) introverted (0%) kind (0%) knowledgeable (0%) logical (0%) loving (0%) mature (50%) modest (0%) nervous (0%) observant (0%) organised (0%) patient (50%) powerful (0%) proud (0%) quiet (0%) reflective (0%) relaxed (0%) religious (0%) responsive (0%) searching (0%) self-assertive (0%) self-conscious (0%) sensible (0%) sentimental (0%) shy (50%) silly (0%) spontaneous (50%) sympathetic (0%) tense (0%) trustworthy (100%) warm (0%) wise (0%) witty (50%)
AngelOD thinks: extroverted, giving, mature, trustworthy, spontaneous, witty.
Seth thinks: caring, giving, accepting, patient, shy, trustworthy.
You can display these results in an email or journal, by cutting and pasting the following HTML:-