Janine Allis has a good balance between her need for movement and her tendency to be sedentary. She is just as likely to adapt to situations which require outbursts of initiative as to those which demand patience and perseverance.
Janine Allis has a great deal of sang-froid. Her inner calm and stolidity predispose her to tasks which require self-control and perseverance. She does not readily display her emotions, even in the most hair-raising situations.
Janine Allis feels, thinks, and acts as a function of objective circumstances. The outer world is the only one which counts for her, and her awareness is entirely focused on it. She is rarely moody or preoccupied and may sometimes be wary of her subjectivity.
Janine Allis has a reactive personality and her responses to various outer stimuli are strong and immediate but generally brief.
Janine Allis tries to focus on her schoolwork, but she finds it difficult to concentrate on a single subject. She is open to new information and ideas and is more cross-disciplinary than specialist. Her centers of interest are fairly widespread and varied.
Janine Allis’ objectivity in perception and behavior could, in the best of cases, lead to generosity and altruism.
Janine Allis’s fierce individualism promotes independent and original behavior. She tends to lack team spirit. On the contrary, she needs to feel free and untrammeled by others to be really effective.
Janine Allis is motivated by a thirst for power which gives her a certain authority. She has a feeling she is leadership material. However, she might be tempted to infringe on other people’s freedom and get involved in troublesome power struggles.
Janine Allis is objectively about herself and is able to recognize both her strengths and her weaknesses.
Janine Allis has a mild and reasonable optimism that rarely causes her to brood about things or be troubled by irrational fears or anxieties.
Janine Allis is chiefly interested in tangible facts and realistic details. A pragmatic personality, she never loses sight of the utilitarian or practical aspects of things.
Janine Allis approaches life by trusting her instinct and reflexes. She rarely has a predetermined plan, preferring to go with the flow.
Janine Allis had always been a bit of an outsider, never quite fitting in with the other students at her school. She was the only one in her class who wasn’t born in America, and she was the only one who didn’t have any siblings.
Even though she was different, Janine always felt connected to the world around her. She loved spending time outside, looking at the stars in the sky and studying the patterns in the leaves on the trees.
One day, Janine found a strange object in the woods. It was a small, silver circle with a blue crystal inside of it. She didn’t know what it was, but she knew she had to take it home.
She carried the circle around with her for a few days, trying to figure out what to do with it. She knew it had to be important, but she couldn’t figure out why.
One night, while she was lying in bed, the circle suddenly started glowing. Janine felt a strange energy coming from it, and she knew she had to put it back where she found it.
She got out of bed, put the circle in the palm of her hand, and ran back to the woods. She was so excited to finally understand what it was that she didn’t notice the man following her.
The man caught up to her as she was walking through the woods, and he grabbed her arm. Janine tried to fight him, but she was too weak.
The man dragged her into the woods, and she saw the circle start glowing brighter and brighter. She started to feel a sense of peace and understanding, and she knew she was going to be okay.
The man forced her to put the circle down, and she saw the look of betrayal in his eyes. She knew she had to go back, no matter what happened.
Janine Allis found the silver circle in the woods and started to feel a strange energy coming from it. She knew she had to put it back where she found it, so she ran back to the woods and was followed by a man. He grabbed her arm and forced her to put the circle down, and she saw the look of betrayal in his eyes.
Janine Allis’s mind is especially perceptive of details. To arrive at a global perception, a vision of the whole, Janine proceeds gradually, piece by piece, aspect after aspect, in a fairly linear fashion.
Janine Allis is inclined to arrange, classify, sort, catalogue, and compartmentalize, in all her life activities as well as her work.
Janine Allis behaves impulsively and is influenced by her imagination. She has the ability to be skillful, ingenious, or shrewd, depending on the situation.
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